In Praise of the Ancestors: Names, Identity, and Memory in Africa and the Americas
Apart from collective memories of lived experiences, much of the modern world's historical sense comes from written sources stored in the archives of the world, and some scholars in the not-so-distant past have described unlettered civilizations as "peoples without history." In Praise...
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Zusammenfassung: | Apart from collective memories of lived experiences, much of the
modern world's historical sense comes from written sources stored
in the archives of the world, and some scholars in the
not-so-distant past have described unlettered civilizations as
"peoples without history." In Praise of the Ancestors is a
revisionist interpretation of early colonial accounts that reveal
incongruities in accepted knowledge about three Native groups.
Susan Elizabeth Ramírez reevaluates three case studies of oral
traditions using positional inheritance-a system in which names and
titles are inherited from one generation by another and thereby
contribute to the formation of collective memories and a group
identity. Ramírez begins by examining positional inheritance and
perpetual kinship among the Kazembes in central Africa from the
eighteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries. Next, her analysis moves
to the Native groups of the Iroquois Confederation and their
practice of using names to memorialize remarkable leaders in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Finally, Ramírez surveys
naming practices of the Andeans, based on sixteenth-century
manuscript sources and later testimonies found in Spanish and
Andean archives, questioning colonial narratives by documenting the
use of this alternative system of memory perpetuation, which was
initially unrecognized by the Spaniards. In the process of
reexamining the histories of Native peoples on three continents,
Ramírez broaches a wider issue: namely, understanding of the nature
of knowledge as fundamental to understanding and evaluating the
knowledge itself. |
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DOI: | 10.2307/j.ctv2fccszx |