Customizing Indigeneity: Paths to a Visionary Politics in Peru

Customizing Indigeneity: Paths to a Visionary Politics in Peru book cover

Customizing Indigeneity: Paths to a Visionary Politics in Peru

Author(s): Shane Greene (Author)

  • Publisher: Stanford University Press
  • Publication Date: 28 May 2009
  • Edition: New
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 269 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0804761183
  • ISBN-13: 9780804761185

Book Description

Customizing Indigeneity follows the Aguaruna on their paths to becoming leaders of Peru’s Amazonian movement, revealing both their creative cultural agency and the constraints of contemporary indigenous movement politics along the way.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Greene’s book, however, shows that the clash between very different kinds of violence, that of the visionary path of the warrior and that of paper, still changes lives, and the conditions of life, in the Upper Amazon . . . [Customizing Indigeneity] makes an important contribution as the first general ethnography of the Aguaruna in English. Its virtue is that it has cleared a path for future ethnographers to try to fathom the violence of the warrior and of the rentier as well. I believe that, with the passing of time, such work will only become more important.”–Steven Rubenstein

“Shane Greene has written a terrific book. This is one of the most innovative and important works on indigeneity in Latin America I have read in a long time. It offers compelling insights into indigenous Amazonian politics and poetics, and contributes significantly to conversations about indigeneity and modernity in Latin America and beyond. This remarkably graceful, direct work will be read, debated, and discussed for years to come.”–Maria Elena Garcia “University of Washington”

“Shane Greene’s book will be an essential reference work for anyone involved in indigenous studies globally and most certainly for scholars of the Amazon. Greene writes well and often demonstrates a playful falir with language. . . [A]n imaginative, provocative, and, ultimately, compelling book that was a pleasure to read.”–Andrew Canessa “American Ethnologist

“The volume will be of interest to scholars wrestling with the ramifications of ‘culture’ and to all students of Peruvian indigenous group . . . Recommended.”–D. L. Browman

“This work asks us to see how the Aguaruna have sized the modern concept of indigeneity to their own lives, and altered its very dimensions in the process. It’s a smart, stylish, and superb ethnography that opens up new ways of thinking both about native Amazonia and the challenges of making sense of 21st century experience everywhere.”–Orin Starn “Duke University”

About the Author

Shane Greene is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Indiana University.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Customizing Indigeneity

Paths to a Visionary Politics in PeruBy Shane Greene

Stanford University Press

Copyright © 2009 Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-8047-6118-5

Contents

List of Illustrations…………………………………………………………………………ixList of Acronyms……………………………………………………………………………..xiAcknowledgments………………………………………………………………………………xvA Path In …………………………………………………………………………………..11 Customizing Indigeneity……………………………………………………………………..9… A Path Between …………………………………………………………………………..392 Paths, Rivers, and Strong Men………………………………………………………………..453 A How-to Manual for Visionary Warriors………………………………………………………..71… Another Path Between ……………………………………………………………………..974 From Schools of War to Schools at War: Bilingual Education and Becoming Indigenous…………………1015 Paths, Roads, and Borders: The Fragmentary Logic of the Native Community………………………….1356 Warriors of Pen and Paper: The Customization of Organizational Encounters…………………………165… A Path Out……………………………………………………………………………….199Epilogue: Field Notes on Customizing Anthropology………………………………………………..205Notes……………………………………………………………………………………….217References…………………………………………………………………………………..227Index……………………………………………………………………………………….237

Chapter One

Customizing Indigeneity

Arrival at Site I: On Ethnographic Arrivals

The opening section, “A Path In …,” is easily recognizable as an ethnographic arrival story. It deploys some fiercely criticized anthropological tropes that range from the dangerous intercultural encounter in the jungle to an implicit desire to establish anthropological authority over the natives. Yet the “writing culture” critique of the canonical ethnographic entre is itself so canonical by now that it has reached the point of clich. Rather than focus solely on my purported proposal for old-style ethnography, this Path In also entails a dizzying array of institutional acronyms, phones, radios, and fax machines, all of which are being administered by natives in and outside the jungle. Whatever authority I invoke is surely less interesting under the lens of this well-known scholarly critique than that of the indigenous activists in the story who have their own postcolonial critique to offer.

My Path In is only one of many possible points of ethnographic entry. So, why did I choose this one? Where does this particular path lead? I chose this path because it directs our attention to a dialogic encounter between two notable men. They sit on schoolhouse tree stumps, eye-to-eye, face-to-face, engaged in an aggressive debate. And they deliberate the past, present, and future of Aguarunia and the politicized layers of indigeneity found there.

At first glance these two notable men appear to represent two opposite extremes. Pijuch, the visionary warrior, represents the past of indigenous custom. Juep, the bilingual indigenous organizer, symbolizes the inevitable approach of Euro-American modernity. If my Path In were interpreted in this way, it would also mark the entrenched conceptual divide between culture and history and, as a matter of course, the disciplinary boundaries between the fields of anthropology and history. There is some kind of before and after implied in Juep’s statement. Perhaps he means to suggest that global modernity, symbolized by the act of “talking to paper,” inevitably replaces indigenous custom, symbolized in the act of “going down the path.” That would also imply that Juep, in the very act of talking to Pijuch, is in the act of displacing him: that Juep’s past represents Pijuch’s future.

There is an element of truth to this interpretation that can’t be denied. The post-World War II investment in Third World development and all that came before it-colonial officials called it civilization; mid-twentieth-century social scientists renamed it modernization-has clearly had an impact throughout Aguarunia. But I interpret the before and after of Juep’s statement as indexing something considerably more complex than simply his false consciousness of a customary modernization narrative-a master narrative that announces the historical arrival of a global capitalist modernity as the inevitable defeat of local customs. After all, if Juep gave in entirely to the old ideology of modernization, he would ultimately also have to give up on the idea of being Aguaruna. Indeed, he would have to trade in Aguarunia’s multiple converging and diverging paths for the single, unilinear path ending in an imagined telos called modernity.

In fact, this dialogic invocation of paper and paths is intended to connote something substantially less unilinear than the single path proposed by modernization. Notice that Pijuch self-consciously acts as he acts within the bounds of a native community. This is the land-tenure institution, crafted for indigenous Amazonians by the Peruvian state in the 1970s, that frames the conflict I experienced in Cachiyacu. The fact that in 2001 Pijuch decided to relocate his house within the territory demarcated by the state as Cachiyacu to avoid further boundary tensions with Achu is evidence enough that he, too, talks to paper even though he doesn’t know how to read. Notice, too, that Adolfo Juep does more than promote educational advancement and indigenous organization building. He also dreams like an Aguaruna warrior. In fact, on a separate occasion, in reference to his long career in indigenous organizing, Juep once told me matter-of-factly: “In my mind I am still a warrior, just of a different kind.”

What is one to make of these distinct paths that simultaneously intersect and diverge from the single path leading toward the homogeneous time and space of global modernity? And what does trying to follow such paths-while trying to avoid making too many enemies or, at least, trying to make a few crucial allies en route-demand of an anthropologist writing in the new century? This is a problem I address by considering Aguaruna activists’ ethnic politics in Peru as projects to customize indigeneity. Specifically, I seek to understand the experience of these notable men who have been absolutely central in building Peru’s pan-Amazonian movement over the last half century. The book analyzes how these men struggle to represent-if only partially-the experiences found in Aguarunia. They do so working both within and well beyond Peru and in the face of considerable historical constraints. Over the long haul the book became my own personal vision quest of sorts. In that quest I follow diverse paths of thought to arrive at distinct sites of analysis. The objective of the journey is to attempt a reconciliation of anthropological representations with contemporary indigenous realities and representations of indigeneity with the contemporary realities of anthropological practice. Engaged in a journey along these paths and through these sites, I attempt to customize my particular mode of talking to paper by making it speak about the visionary importance of paths.

Seeking an Academic Vision

When I first began this text, I sought an academic vision that might help articulate this problem of paths and paper that Adolfo Juep once aptly described. It began in the library, the site on which every path that involves talking to paper eventually converges. I wondered what alternative paths exist to the straight and single path symbolized by modernization theory. What postmodern paths-a controversial periodization-have already been forged?

Given developments in social theory over the last couple of decades, I see there are already several alternative paths to follow. I could represent indigenous activists as creatively adapting to their very own “alternative modernity” (Gaonkar, 2001). Or I might interpret their actions in terms of an indigenization of their conjuncture with modernity through a complex mytho-praxis (Sahlins, 1993). Or, for that matter, I could read their indigenous politics as a process of “glocalization” through which they make global capitalism just a little more locally familiar (Robertson, 1995).

Each of these alternative paths is preferable to the unilinear path invoked by classical modernization and the social evolutionary theory on which it was predicated. Choosing among them seems to depend quite a bit on where one wants to place the final analytical emphasis. Will it be on the postcolonial problematic of trying-always trying if never quite succeeding-to recover the silenced voice of subaltern difference? On the drive toward dialectical resolution of the culture-versus-history, structure-versus-action, ideology-versus-practice dichotomies of social theory? Or on the political economics of global capitalism and localized resistance or, at a minimum, adaptation to it? Each path presents a plausible alternative theoretical vision for explaining indigenous activism in Aguarunia. Yet choosing one entails accepting some assumptions that I find problematic. Indigeneity in such accounts becomes an almost automatic synonym for difference, mythic culture, and locality. The relevant dialectical counterparts-the implied sameness, the factual history, and the emergent globality of modernity-seem to constantly hover in the background.

What can the alterity of subalterns be, other than generic difference, if the primary point of contrast is always modernity’s ostensible drive toward generic sameness? The idea of alternative modernities doesn’t make much sense unless alterity is conceptualized as that which must perpetually, and thus generically, differentiate itself from modernity’s equally generic and perpetual singularity (cf. Knauft, 2003). Perhaps this explains why Dilip Gaonkar (2001: 1) can devote an entire discussion to the ways in which alternative modernities represent pluralization only after his opening confession: “To think in terms of ‘alternative modernities’ is to admit that modernity is inescapable and to desist from speculations about the end of modernity.” The slippage between the plural and the singular is telling. To insist we look for modernity’s alternatives everywhere is also to insist we not look for alternatives to modernity anywhere, as John Kelly (2003) warns us. The iron cage, newly partitioned to suit multicultural times and lingering postcolonial anxieties, still rattles a lot like the old one.

If, on the other hand, I were to choose to “explode the concept of history by the anthropological experience of culture,” as Sahlins (1985: xvii) once forcefully suggested we do, I am left with a slightly different problem. Does mytho-praxis-Sahlins’s dialectical synthesis of langue and parole; structure and action; American and French anthropology-resolve the culture-history opposition once and for all? And Levi-Strauss’s division of the world into “cold” and “hot” societies along with it? Or does it not also resymbolize it in other forms? For all Sahlins’s convincing rereadings of Captain Cook’s arrival in Hawaii, I am still left with one impression. The Hawaiian Islands appear to be lying in wait, all ritually equipped and mythic structures set perfectly in place, right up until the moment when Captain Cook’s ship sails into the harbor. That’s when the mytho-praxeological action really seems to begin.

Finally, what can one say about a term like “glocalization”? Without theories that assert the economic reality of Europe’s global capitalist expansion, and the accompanying assumption that capitalism is filtered through European-styled nation-states inherited from the Peace of Westphalia, neither globality nor locality makes much sense. The “global” in “globalization” is often used as a euphemism for “capital.” “Local” is used as a euphemism for “everything else” that already has been or soon will be overrun by it. The hybridized term “glocalization” seems doomed to replicate the idea that the local is always a non-Europeanized nation, or a less Europeanized segment within a Europeanized nation, which has “not yet” (to invoke Chakrabarty’s [2000] phrase) been absorbed by capital but necessarily will be. How does one speak about capitalism without setting it up as this eternal contrast between the globalized European nation-state form and localized non-Europeanized nation-states’ degree of conformity to it? How does one talk about capitalism without seeing global capital’s past as local people’s future?

My sense of doubt about these alternative paths to that of modernization is what leads me in search of an alternative to the alternatives, other paths leading toward a slightly different vision. At first, it occurred to me to try the exact opposite starting point. I might start from the assumption that indigeneity, rather than representing an opposite, is in reality a synonym for sameness, for history, and for the global. Here, too, appear a series of possible paths, as in the following examples.

Subjected to European colonization, lamented through post-World War II modernization, indigeneity is now revitalized through multiculturalization. In Africa indigeneity appears to be simultaneously the essential obstacle and a possible solution to that continent’s historical struggle with decolonization (Hodgson, 2002; Mamdani, 2001). In Australia aboriginal populations represent the paradoxical presence of an unrecognizable past from the point of view of the multicultural state (Povinelli, 2002). By all accounts, Latin America is experiencing an indigenous awakening of regional and revolutionary proportions, redefining citizenship, neoliberal capitalism, and the region’s utopian futures in the process (Alb, 1991; Brysk, 2000; Hale, 2002; Rappaport, 2005; Warren and Jackson, 2002; Yashar, 2005). Marisol de la Cadena and Orin Starn (2007) note how today’s indigenous experiences, seen from a more explicitly cross-regional perspective-from those of Maori parliamentarians to Mapuche punk rockers-couldn’t be any more cosmopolitan. One might add, as John and Jean Comaroff (in press) do, that indigeneity increasingly takes on incorporated forms, morphing into ethnic firms that both internalize and contest today’s neoliberal market values (cf. Greene, 2004b).

But perhaps we might reconsider indigeneity not just in terms of geopolitical space but also in terms of historical time. We might think of indigeneity not as continuous with the prehistorical past but as a full member, indeed a constituent element, of the historical present. Indigeneity is not that which comes before but that which derives from the stage of modernity: Walter Benjamin’s empty homogeneous time that intellectual critics constantly fill up with an analysis of the rise of nation-states, science, narratives of progress, experiences of alienation and urbanization, and, of course, the all-pervasive logic of the commodity form.

There seems to be more than enough evidence for this. The United Nations has now officially declared indigeneity. The International Labor Organization now consults it. The World Bank operationalizes indigeneity into international development policies and procedures. One can’t even begin to summarize the ways in which it is legally constituted and institutionally arranged through multicultural reforms, land-titling initiatives, language-recognition policies, and nongovernmental advocacy networks around the planet. Yet, counter to Niezen’s (2003) focus on “indigenism” as a product of the United Nations era, we might start by recognizing that it has existed in a legally sanctioned, institutionalized form since European coloniality began. The Spanish Crown sanctioned its existence via the creation of the Republica de Indios in the early stages of Iberian expansion to the Americas. By some accounts this was the first experiment with modern techniques of governmentality and certainly the process of colonial racialization that attends to them (Silverblatt, 2004). Importantly, as de la Cadena and Starn (2007: 7) note, the institutionalization of indigeneity occurred not only via the processes of colonial bureaucratization but also in critical dialogue with multiple indigenous and pro-indigenous intellectuals. In colonial Peru indigenous writers like Guaman Poma de Ayala and mestizo intellectuals like the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega were already writing protest letters to the king and comparing Peru’s highland indigenous civilization to the best Europe had to offer at the turn of the seventeenth century.

Indigeneity also turns up in modernity’s bad habits and eternal hopes, accompanying suburban sprawl and constantly haunting guilty white imaginations. It’s in Native American casino chips, DNA databases, the tour packages to Amazonian eco-lodges, and World Music bins at the CD store. It’s in the latest pathbreaking drug at the pharmacy and on the alternative medicine shelf at the health food store. Indigeneity also finds its way into all those houses equipped with cable TV and a subscription to the Discovery channel. And it was just recently repopularized into a new form to make the New York Times Notable Books list (Mann, 2005).

The point-or, rather, one alternative vision to a vision of alternative modernities-is that indigeneity doesn’t merely “creatively adapt” (Gaonkar, 2001) to the space-time of the modern, global, capitalist world in order to fragment it into pieces of localized generic difference. Indigeneity is what keeps the modern, global, capitalist world going! It is a form of generically modern difference constructed on the model-and in the mirror-of generically modern sameness. It doesn’t emerge as an alternative path to modernity but as a path that begins and ends with modernity. One might even go so far as to say (with apologies to Bruno Latour) that indigeneity has always been modern. Indeed, in many ways it is more modern than modern Europe (with a nod to Charles Mann and a footnote to Guaman Poma).

(Continues…)


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