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University of California Press

About the Book

To Weave and Sing is the first in-depth analysis of the rich spiritual and artistic traditions of the Carib-speaking Yekuana Indians of Venezuela, who live in the dense rain forest of the upper Orinoco. Within their homeland of Ihuruna, the Yekuana have succeeded in maintaining the integrity and unity of their culture, resisting the devastating effects of acculturation that have befallen so many neighboring groups. Yet their success must be attributed to more than natural barriers of rapids and waterfalls, to more than lack of "contact" with our "modern" world. The ethnographic history recounted here includes not only the Spanish discovery of the Yekuana but detailed indigenous accounts of the entire history of Yekuana contact with Western culture, revealing an adaptive technique of mythopoesis by which the symbols of a new and hostile European ideology have been consistently defused through their incorporation into traditional indigenous structures.

The author's initial point of departure is the Watunna, the Yekuana creation epic, but he finds his principal entrance into this mythic world through basketry, focusing on the eleborate kinetic designs of the round waja baskets and the stories told about them. Guss argues that the problem of understanding Yekuana basketry is the problem of understanding all traditional art forms within a tribal context, and critiques the cultural assumptions inherent in our systems of classification. He demonstrates that the symbols woven into the baskets function not in isolation but collectively, as a powerful system cutting across the entire culture.

To Weave and Sing addresses all Yekuana material culture and the greater reality it both incorporates and masks, discerning a unifying configuration of symbols in chapters on architectural forms, the geography of the body, and the use of herbs, face paints, and chants. A narrow view of slash-and-burn gardens as places of mere subsistence is challenged by Guss's portrait of these exclusively female spaces as systematic inversions of the male world, "the sacred turned on its head." Throughout, a wealth of narrative and ritual materials provides us with the closest approximation we have to a native exegesis of these phenomena. What we are offered here is a new Poetics of Culture, ethnography not as a static given but as a series of shifting fields, wherein culture (and our image of it) is constantly recreated in all of its parts, by all of its members.

About the Author

David M. Guss is a poet, translator, editor, folklorist, and anthropologist who has lived and worked in various parts of Latin America. He is currently a Mellon Faculty Fellow at Harvard University.

Table of Contents

Illustrations 
Acknowledgements 
1 . INTRODUCTION: The Syntax of Culture 
2· THE PEOPLE 
'The Ones of This Earth" 
Ihuruna, "The Headwater Place" 
Ethnographic History 
3· CULTURE AND ETHOS: A Play of Forces 
The IIouse 
Economic Activities 
The Dual Nature of Reality 
The Garden 
The Geography of the Body 
Ahacbito !Jato, 'The New Person" 
The Six Souls 
The First People 
The Manipulation of the Invisible 
Magic Herbs 
Body Paints 
Singing 
4· "ALL THINGS MADE" 
Tidi'uma 
A Cycle of Baskets 
Marriage 
The Tradition 
The Poetics of Basketry 
5· ORIGIN AND DESIGN 
Myths of the Origins of Artifacts 
The Devil's Face Paint 
The Designs 
Shifting Fields 
6· THE FORM OF CONTENT 
Yododai 
Edodicha 
Fasting 
The Fast Baskets 
Weed Out Mawadi: The Tingkui Yechamatojo 
7· TO WEAVE THE WORLD 
A GALLERY OF BASKETS 
Notes 
Bibliography 
Index 

Reviews

"To Weave and Sing is a beautiful book that crosses disciplines—a celebration of the human imagination that transcends cultural barriers."—Lucy R. Lippard, author of Pop Art and Overlay: Contemporary Art and the Art of Prehistory

"In David Guss's To Weave and Sing, the core of the world's most cryptic cultural region takes form and shines by its own light."—Roy Wagner, University of Virginia

"Guss takes us a good way into the sacred ideology of the Yekuana basket and into the minds of the Yekuana as they sing their baskets into existence. . . . I would call this a seminal and path-breaking work, one of the most stimulating and significant in many a year on South American Indian culture."—Peter T. Furst, University of Pennsylvania Museum