Colombian Counterpoint: Transculturation in Sibundoy Valley Ethnohistory

Rowan F. F. Glass
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Anthropological and historical scholarship on cultural change in colonially subordinated cultures has often stressed deculturation—cultural loss and degradation—as a consequence of colonialism. This paper disputes that narrative by presenting the case of Indigenous cultural change in the Sibundoy Valley of southwest Colombia from an ethnohistorical perspective. Drawing on historical, ethnographic, and theoretical texts and relying on the concept of transculturation—understood as a complex process of partial loss, partial gain, and the creation of new cultural phenomena from intercultural encounters—as a more nuanced alternative to deculturation, I outline the history of cultural change in the valley from the prehispanic period to the present. While recognizing that colonialism had catastrophic effects on the Indigenous communities of the valley, I also suggest that these communities’ deep historical experiences with transculturation in the prehispanic era enabled the preservation and rearticulation of core elements of Indigenous cultures in the post-contact period. That transcultural experience allowed for the incorporation of foreign, colonially imposed cultural elements into the pre-existing cultural framework of the valley. The historical continuity of the transcultural experience in the valley demonstrates that its Indigenous communities have not been passive subjects of colonial power, but rather active agents in negotiating and mitigating its deculturating effects. This approach emphasizes the historical agency of the Indigenous peoples of the Sibundoy Valley as the central protagonists and makers of their own history. I conclude by suggesting the broader applicability of this perspective to other situations of cultural change in colonial and postcolonial contexts.
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哥伦比亚对位:西本多伊山谷的跨文化民族历史
关于殖民从属文化的文化变化的人类学和历史学者经常强调文化失文化——文化的丧失和退化——这是殖民主义的后果。本文从民族历史的角度,以哥伦比亚西南部西本多伊山谷的土著文化变迁为例,对这种说法提出了质疑。借鉴历史、人种学和理论文本,依靠跨文化的概念——被理解为部分损失、部分获得的复杂过程,以及从跨文化接触中创造新的文化现象——作为一种更细致入微的替代文化异化,我概述了从前西班牙时期到现在的山谷文化变迁的历史。虽然认识到殖民主义对山谷的土著社区造成了灾难性的影响,但我也认为,这些社区在前西班牙时代的跨文化历史经验,使土著文化的核心要素在后接触时期得以保存和重新表达。这种跨文化的经历使得外来的、殖民强加的文化元素融入了山谷原有的文化框架。山谷中跨文化经验的历史连续性表明,其土著社区并不是殖民权力的被动主体,而是谈判和减轻其文化异化影响的积极参与者。这种方法强调西本多伊山谷土著人民的历史作用,他们是自己历史的主角和创造者。最后,我建议这一观点更广泛地适用于殖民和后殖民背景下的文化变革的其他情况。
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