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vol.38 issue44Health craftsmen: A concept for thinking about the work of rural healers in the North of Antioquia, Colombia author indexsubject indexarticles search
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Anthropologica

Print version ISSN 0254-9212

Abstract

GUHL SAMUDIO, Juan Felipe. A traffic accident seen through the eyes of Amazonic shamanism. Anthropologica [online]. 2020, vol.38, n.44, pp.13-41. ISSN 0254-9212.  http://dx.doi.org/10.18800/anthropologica.202001.002.

This work was carried out with the indigenous community of the Mirití-Paraná river, a short tributary of the Caquetá (Japura) river, located northwest of Colombia’s Amazon basin. I set forth the therapeutic journey of Enio Yukuna, an old man who had a traffic accident and, when telling the story of what happened, recalled that his misfortune began some decades ago when he went tapir hunting in a clay lick. His story and journey are relevant because he talks about how he conceives the land, cosmopolitics, the ontological processes to learn shamanism, and of the interaction of biomedicine and the Western medical system. In doing so, he speaks explicitly of the typical healing processes that take place in his region, going through shamans of different ethnic groups and varied knowledge that behave in different ways vis-à-vis his affliction. He also talks about gender complementarity with his wife and about prejudice against youth migration, and finally tells how he was sent to Bogota to be treated for his ailment. It is an incredible story that gives us the opportunity to explore the multiple Amazonic universes regarding a person’s health.

Keywords : shamanism; therapeutic itinerary; ontology; self-care; intermedicality; Mirití-Paraná; Yukuna; explanatory model..

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