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Yopo, ethnicity and social change: a comparative analysis of Piaroa and Cuiva yopo uset.

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Date
2011-01
Authors
Rodd, Robin
Sumabila, Arelis
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Abstract
Most Orinocoan ethnic groups, including the Cuiva and the Piaroa, use yopo, a hallucinogenic snuff derived from the seeds of the Anadenanthera peregrina tree. This study contrasts Piaroa and Cuiva attitudes toward and uses of yopo in light of ongoing processes of social change. We do not believe that these sociocultural forces will lead to a phasing out of yopo in Piaroa and Cuiva life. However, we demonstrate how, in nearby communities, a combination of historical and ethical contingencies lead to very different patterns and understanding of drug use. Yopo is strongly associated with the performance of narratives central to each ethnic group's cosmology and identity. Cuiva yopo consumption is also a means of resisting persecution and asserting the right to a just reality. Piaroa attitudes towards yopo are affected by the interplay of shamanic ethical principles and missionary activity, and are sometimes paradoxical: yopo is the reason for harm and the means of salvation; required by shamans to create the future and yet regarded by many laypeople as a relic of the past. We identify persecution, local responses to missionary activity, and shamanic ethics as key factors affecting the evolution of hallucinogen use by Amazonian ethnic groups.
Type
Journal article
Subject
Humans
Substance-Related Disorders
Hallucinogens
Shamanism
Culture
Colonialism
Social Change
Legislation, Drug
Religion
Christianity
Indians, South American
Ethnic Groups
Colombia
Venezuela
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22358
Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1080/02791072.2011.566499
Publication Info
Rodd, Robin; & Sumabila, Arelis (2011). Yopo, ethnicity and social change: a comparative analysis of Piaroa and Cuiva yopo uset. Journal of psychoactive drugs, 43(1). pp. 36-45. 10.1080/02791072.2011.566499. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22358.
This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Scholars@Duke

Rodd

Robin Hudson Rodd

Associate Professor of Anthropology at Duke Kunshan University
I began my career as an anthropologist studying with Piaroa communities in southern Venezuela, where I was interested in the use of psychoactive plants, local theories and practices of knowledge, mind, power, and health. I focused on the ways that consciousness practices associated with the consumption of yopo snuff and Banisteriopsis caapi were socially transmitted and integrated into everyday community life. I have since examined the ritual practices and theories of selfhood
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