Titre | Terre et échanges chez les Anga (Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée) | |
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Auteur | Pierre Lemonnier, Pascale Bonnemère | |
Revue | Etudes rurales | |
Numéro | no 127-128, 1992 La terre et le Pacifique | |
Page | 133-158 | |
Résumé anglais |
Land and Exchanges among the Anga (Papua New Guinea)
The lineage model worked out by africanists does not account for the definition of local groups or, more generally, for the nature of social bonds in New Guinea. The ways the environment is worked and land is appropriated (bush country for hunting and fields for farming) in two Anga groups (Ankave and Baruya) are described. Questions then arise about the forms of the relationship with the land. This comparative study sheds light on the overall logic linking earth, food and exchanges. References to localities and to work are inherent in this logic, which sheds light on cooperation between affines and forms of marriage, as well as on the ceremonial use of game from hunting. The main markers of the land are the trees associated with the production of the bodily substances most valued in conceptions about the making of human beings and in masculine initiation ceremonies : blood and sperm. Source : Éditeur (via Persée) |
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Article en ligne | http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/rural_0014-2182_1992_num_127_1_3384 |