A Tale of Pudicho's People: Cashinahua Accounts of European Contact in the Twentieth Century (Publications in Ethnography, 38) - Richard Montag - Books - SIL International - 9781556711312 - August 1, 2002
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A Tale of Pudicho's People: Cashinahua Accounts of European Contact in the Twentieth Century (Publications in Ethnography, 38)

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Early in the twentieth century a group of Cashinahua migrated from Brazil to Peru to escape the turmoil of the rubber boom era. Dr. Richard Montag provides first-hand accounts of the experiences of members of this group. Pudicho, a retired headman and the primary source for the accounts, reports his boyhood experiences, the migration, and more recent happenings. Montag worked with him for about eight years, recording, transcribing, and analyzing the accounts. He also worked with Pudicho's son and two nephews and so was able to bring the accounts up to 1994.

Richard Montag and his wife Susan began living among the Cashinahua in 1969, at which time the group was monolingual. The accounts of this work are one aspect of the Montags' study of the language and culture and were the basis of his Ph. D. dissertation.

The Cashinahua live on various rivers and streams at the headwaters of the Juruá¡ and Purús rivers in Brazil and Peru. Montag's study makes it possible for readers to visualize events and cultural practices that very few outsiders have ever had the privilege of observing.

Table of Contents

Dedication
Acknowledgments

  1. Introduction
  2. Initial Contact
  3. The Escape
  4. Return to the Old Ways
  5. Renewing Contact with Outsiders
  6. An Unequal Situation
  7. Different Outsiders
  8. Replacements
  9. Accelerated Change
  10. The Present-Day Situation

Appendix
References

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released August 1, 2002
ISBN13 9781556711312
Publishers SIL International
Pages 170
Dimensions 150 × 10 × 225 mm   ·   249 g
Language English  

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