Rupununi Imaginaries

dc.contributor.advisorPeake, Linda Joyce
dc.creatorMacdonald, Katherine Louise
dc.date.accessioned2015-08-28T15:06:51Z
dc.date.available2015-08-28T15:06:51Z
dc.date.copyright2014-10-08
dc.date.issued2015-08-28
dc.date.updated2015-08-28T15:06:51Z
dc.degree.disciplineGeography
dc.degree.levelDoctoral
dc.degree.namePhD - Doctor of Philosophy
dc.description.abstractMigration activity across the Guyanese-Brazilian border has increased considerably recently, and is impacting both the peoples and the environments of the Rupununi. The activities resulting from these migration movements threaten to increase pressures on Indigenous territories within Guyana, resulting in the annexation of traditional ancestral lands, leading to potential losses of subsistence and livelihood practices. By examining these movements through the lens of relations between the Indigenous Makushi and Wapishana peoples of the Rupununi and place-making, this dissertation aims to identify how accepting Indigenous ontologies as one of many perspectives of the world(s) helps in understanding places as multiple. Through this understanding and acceptance of multiplicities, these ontologies also contribute to new ways of imagining future(s). This ethnographic study was conducted through sixteen months of fieldwork within five Rupununi villages - Aishalton, Annai Central, Karasabai, St. Ignatius, and Shulinab - researching together with the Makushi and Wapishana peoples of the region who collectively live within the forest-savannah ecotone, mostly maintaining subsistence based lifestyles. By exploring personal histories, environments, and cosmologies, the possibilities for different, multiple, imaginaries-as-realities of the Rupununi are presented. In doing so, this study finds that Makushi and Wapishana ontologies are counter-imagining places, lands, and territories by re-engaging with the imaginaries of their ancestors, producing a complex set of alternate geographies. In using these imaginaries to produce different visions of place, Rupununi peoples are empowering themselves to create positive change within their lives in terms of how they want to build and develop their communities, livelihoods, environments, and cultural and political institutions.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/29944
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAuthor owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
dc.subjectGeography
dc.subjectEnvironmental studies
dc.subjectLatin American studies
dc.subject.keywordsAmazon
dc.subject.keywordsBorder
dc.subject.keywordsBoundary
dc.subject.keywordsBrazil
dc.subject.keywordsExtractive resources
dc.subject.keywordsGarimpeiro
dc.subject.keywordsGuyana
dc.subject.keywordsImaginary
dc.subject.keywordsImagined territories
dc.subject.keywordsIndigeneity
dc.subject.keywordsIndigenous methodologies
dc.subject.keywordsMakushi
dc.subject.keywordsMigration
dc.subject.keywordsMining
dc.subject.keywordsMyth
dc.subject.keywordsOntology
dc.subject.keywordsPlace-making
dc.subject.keywordsPlantation ecology
dc.subject.keywordsPolitical ecology
dc.subject.keywordsRoad ecology
dc.subject.keywordsRupununi
dc.subject.keywordsSocial natures
dc.subject.keywordsTerritory
dc.subject.keywordsWapishana.
dc.titleRupununi Imaginaries
dc.typeElectronic Thesis or Dissertationen_US

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