Plant agency in the Guianas: attraction, assault, and animacy

James Andrew Whitaker, Vikram Tamboli, Lewis Daly, Matthias Lewy

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

"This article uses ethnographic and ethnobotanical methods to examine relationships between animate and agentive plants and human beings among the Makushi, Pemon, Karinya, and other Indigenous and mixed-Indigenous peoples in the Guianas. It considers representations of these plants and related ontologies in the archival record and contrasts these accounts with more recent ethnographic descriptions based on the authors’ eldwork across Guyana and Venezuela. It thinks about these plants as agentive beings (with regard to animist ontologies and sometimes physical properties) within a variety of contexts. Today, the territories of these Indigenous peoples tessellate with extractive frontiers, which center around gold, diamond, and bauxite mining, as well as oil prospecting, forestry, and plantation agriculture. In this context, these plants emerge as active and animate agents. They also emerge as such agents in contexts of subsistence, shamanism, and assault sorcery, as well as sexual and romantic attraction, which can act with or without human impetus. The question arises as to the nature of the relationships between such plants and their users, for example, shamans (piaimen), assault sorcerers (kanaima), hunters, gardeners, and miners, within a variety of contexts. Based on the authors’ long-term eldwork, the article examines animate plants and argues that they evince special botanical agencies among the Indigenous communities with whom the authors have worked in the Guianas. How are animate plants positioned within these practices and contexts? And how do they exert agency therein as plant persons?"
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)247-359
JournalJournal of Ethnobiology
Volume44
Issue number4
Early online date22 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2024

Keywords

  • Animate Plants
  • Animacy
  • Shamanism
  • Sorcery
  • Indigenous peoples of the Amazon
  • Plant Agency

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Plant agency in the Guianas: attraction, assault, and animacy'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this