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Department of Anthropology                        University of Pittsburgh

 

Anthropology 1548 – Amazonian Arts: Making and Meaning    45 contact hours

Summer 2021. 2:00-4:30  M-TH

Pitt in Ecuador

 

Dr. Tod Swanson, tod.dillon.swanson@gmail.com        

Office hours will be posted for this course, and instructors are available by appointment.

 

Course description: 

Content, purposes, and methods of this course:

This course introduces students to the visual and literary arts of the Amazonian region in the context of their function and meaning. The course will be taught as a combination of lecture and hands-on experience working with Native potters from the Bobonaza River. Students will learn to make pottery in the Kichwa (Quichua) tradition, and to understand the role of pottery and material culture in the daily lives of people in this region. On a number of occasions, students will accompany the Native potters on journeys into the adjacent forest to gather materials and to study the patterns in nature that inspire them. Here students will observe related arts such as face paint patterns, beaded ornaments, ritual singing and storytelling. Carefully selected readings and lectures will use these arts as a window for exploring Amazonian thinking about the natural world behind the designs, and the ways in which the designs can be used to understand patterns of social interaction. Interviews with potters will aid in understanding these arts in the context of daily and ceremonial life. In the process, the arts become a doorway allowing the student to explore Amazonian culture and environment first hand. Comparative material from several other world regions will also be discussed.

 

 

Objectives and outcomes: 

 

This course introduces students to Amazonian artistic traditions set within the context of pottery as a longstanding Native tradition. The course has three interrelated learning objectives:

1. To provide an anthropological perspective on Native people of the Upper Amazon, their material arts, and world view;

2. To provide a context for the development of tools and skills so that students learn to create and decorate pottery using techniques and designs with the guidance of Kichwa artists;

3. To explain how a holistic, analytical, and comparative framework leads to greater understanding of continuity and change in artistic and material culture. 

 

Through lectures, field trips, and experience practicing within the tradition of local artists, students learning outcomes are: 

 

To understand the physical and cultural contexts of Amazonian culture and their worldview,

To understand the mythic and ceremonial context of Amazonian ceramic art,

To gain proficiency in making ceramic vessels in an Amazonian style, 

To understand traditional and contemporary contexts of Amazonian art. 

 

 

II. Course structure and organization: 

    This course relies on a combination of lectures, demonstrations, field trips, readings, and written assignments to introduce students to the artistic traditions of the upper Amazon and to immerse themselves in the practice of pottery making.  

The course will meet a total of 45 hours for in-class lecture, discussion, and hands-on work. n making pottery. 

 

Course outline:

Week 1: 

This unit provides an overview of Amazonian ecology and beliefs, along with an introduction to the properties of clay and the forms of Amazonian pottery. 

Sunday             May 30            Arrive in Quito

Monday            May 31            Travel down to Iyarina. 

Tuesday            June  1             9:30 AM  Swanson, Introduction to the history and cultural geography of the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Wednesday      June  2             2:00-2:45 Lecture:   Shared Body: The Quichua Relational Self 

                                                    3:00-4:30  Story of Tayag Warmi/Clay Woman.  Record a mañachina (prayer)                                                                                            to clay woman.  Dig clay.  

Thursday          June  3             2:00-2:45  Art of Late Antiquity and Amazonian Art as "Primitive Art".  Lecture on the use and                                                            form of  mukajas. 

                                                    3:00-4:30  Read and discuss journal entries.  Make a Mucagua.

Friday                June  4             Story of Kingu, Iluku, and the Moon.  Discussion.  

                                                    Hike in the forest to study patterns.

 

Saturday           June  5            Free Day.  No class. 

Sunday              June 6             Free Day.  No class. 

 

Monday            June 7              2:00-2:45  Paint Mucawas.   Art of Mogaje Guihu  Abel Rodríguez

                                                    3:00-4:30  Read and discuss journal entries.  

Tuesday            June 8              2:00-2:45  Comparison of Japanese Art to Amazonian Art 

                                                    3:00-4:30  Read and discuss journal entries.

Wednesday      June 9              2:00-2:45  Comparison of Haiku to Indigenous verbal art
                                                    3:00-4:30  Read and discuss journal entries.

Thursday          June 10            Basso, Speaking with names.  Interview Belgica and Eulodia on the designs of a mukaja and                                                              write a paragraph analyzing the meaning of a specific mukaja. 

Friday                June 11           Free to write and study

 

Saturday           June 12           Free Day. No classes.

Sunday              June 13           Free Day.  No classes.

 

Monday            June 14            Looking Like the Land (Sound, Taste, Sight, Smell)

Tuesday            June 15            The story of Wituk and Manduru/ Paint faces

Wednesday      June 16            Kichwa poetry

Thursday          June 17            Design as personal history-objects as extensions of the body

Friday                June 18            Guided research and interviewing.

 

Saturday           June 19           Free Day.  No class. 

Sunday              June 20           Free Day.  No class. 

 

Monday            June 21           Llaki and empathy in Kichwa art.

Tuesday            June 22           Hike in the forest to study patterns

Wednesday      June 23           Biography of the artists

Thursday          June 24           Biography of the artists

Friday                June 25           Final.  Course wind up. 

Saturday           June 26           Travel to the airport

15 Indigenous Designers on What Sustainable Fashion Is Missing

 

Selected readings: 

 

Excerpts from classic ethnographies:

Uzendoski, Michael  

2005     The Napo Runa of Amazonian Ecuador. Chicago: University of Illinois Press. 

 

Whitten, Dorothea S. and Norman E. Whitten, Jr. 

1988    From myth to creation: Art from Amazonian Ecuador. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

 

Whitten, Norman E. Jr

1976    Sacha Runa: Ethnicity and Adaptation of Ecuadorian Jungle Quichua. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

 

Whitten, Norman E. and Dorothea S. Whitten

2008    Puyo Runa: Imagery and Power in Modern Amazonia. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. 

 

Amazonian aesthetics:

Belaunde, Luisa Elvira

2000    The convivial self and the fear of anger amongst the Airo-Pai of Amazonian Peru.  In Joanna Overing and Alan Passes eds., The Anthropology of Love and Anger: The Aesthetics of Conviviality in Native Amazonia, Routledge: London. Pp 46-63.

 

Gow, Peter

2000    Helplessness – the affective preconditions of Piro social life”.  In Joanna Overing and Alan Passes eds., The Anthropology of Love and Anger: The Aesthetics of Conviviality in Native Amazonia, Routledge: London. Pp 46-63.

 

Lagrou, Elsje Maria

2000    Homesickness and the Cashinahua self". In Joanna Overing and Alan Passes eds., The Anthropology of Love and Anger: The Aesthetics of Conviviality in Native Amazonia, pp 152-169.  Routledge: London.

 

Parkes, Graham

2011    Japanese Aesthetics", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2011 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2011/entries/japanese-aesthetics/

 

Nuckolls, Janis B. and Swanson, Tod D. 

2014    Earthy Concreteness and Anti-Hypotheticalism in Amazonian Quichua Discourse. Tipití: Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Lowland South America: Vol. 12: Iss. 1, Article 4, 48-60. Available at: http://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/tipiti/vol12/iss1/4  

 

Swanson, Tod D. 

2009    Singing to Estranged Relatives: Quichua Relations to Plants in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Journal of Religion and Culture Vol. 3.1:36-65. 

 

 

Ethnoarchaeology and archaeology:

Andrea Silva, Fabiola

2008     Ceramic Technology of the Asurini do Xingu, Brazil: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Artifact Variability. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 15:217-265. 

 

Bowser, Brenda 

2000    From Pottery to Politics: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Political Factionalism, Ethnicity, and Domestic Pottery Style in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7:210-248. 

 

Bowser, Brenda and John Q. Patton

2004    Domestic Spaces as Public Places: An Ethnoarchaeological Case Study of Houses, Gender, and Politics in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 11:157-181.

2008    Women’s Life Histories and Communities of Practice in the Ecuadorian Amazon. In Cultural Transmission and Material Culture: Breaking Down Boundaries, edited by M. T. Stark, B.J. Bowser, and L. Horne. University of Arizona Press. Pp. 105-129. 

 

Mills, Barbara J.

1999    Ceramics and the Social Contexts of Food Consumption in the Northern Southwest. In Pottery and People: A Dynamic Interaction, ed. J. M. Skibo and G.M. Feinman. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. Pp. 99-114.

 

Minar, C. Jill and Patricia L. Crown

2001    Learning and Craft Production: An Introduction. Journal of Anthropological Research 57(4):369-380. 

 

Crown, Patricia L.

1999    Socialization in American Southwest Pottery Decoration. In Pottery and People: A Dynamic Interaction, ed. J. M. Skibo and G.M. Feinman. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. Pp. 25-43.

2001    Learning to Make Pottery in the Prehispanic American Southwest. Journal of Anthropological Research 57(4):451-469. 

 

Chavez, Karen L. Mohr

1992    The Organization of Production and Distribution of Traditional Pottery in South Highland Peru. In Ceramic Production and Distribution: An Integrated Approach, edited by C. Pool and G. Bey. Westview Press, Boulder, CO. Pp. 49-92. 

 

Stark, Miriam T.

1999    Social Dimensions of Technical Choice in Kalinga Ceramic Tradition. In Material Meanings: Critical Approaches to the Interpretation of Material Culture, ed. E. S. Chilton, pp.24-43. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. 

 

Vincentelli, Moira

2003    Women Potters: Transforming Traditions. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ.

 

Wallaert-Petre, Helene

2001    Learning How to Make the Right Pots: Apprenticeship Strategies and Material Culture, A Case Study in Handmade Pottery from Cameroon. Journal of Anthropological Research 57(4):471-493.

 

Course Requirements: Assignments and grading

Class participation (25%): Students are expected to keep up with readings, attend classes and fieldtrips, practice making pottery, and engage in class discussions of readings and fieldtrips. 

 

Journaling (25%): Students will keep a journal that reflects the teaching of the native potters, both in the practice of pottery manufacture, and in the meanings of pottery designs and their association with the natural world. They will also document their progress in pottery production. Short journal assignments in which students are asked to integrate readings with their participation will also be required. Each student will be expected to submit five 3 to 5 page analytic journal entries during the course. 

 

Practicum (10%): Each student will take an oral exam where they will be asked to discuss the pottery they have produced and the meanings of the designs placed on it. 

 

Final essay exam/paper (40%): Each student will develop a six to eight page paper on a topic that comes directly from some aspect of the program. Essays will draw on the readings, material presented in lectures, field trips, and demonstrations, and will include additional material drawn from either the students interaction with the Native potters, or from the trip to the Pre-Columbian Art Museum in Quito. 

 

 

Course Policies: 

Academic Integrity Policy: Cheating/plagiarism will not be tolerated. Students suspected of violating the University of Pittsburgh Policy on Academic Integrity, noted below, will be required to participate in the outlined procedural process as initiated by the instructor. A minimum sanction of a zero score for the quiz, exam or paper will be imposed. (For the full academic Integrity policy, go to www.provost.pitt.edu/info/ai1.html.)

 

E-mail Communication Policy: Each student is issued a University e-mail address (username@pitt.edu) upon admittance. This e-mail address may be used by the University for official communication with students. Students are expected to read e-mail sent to this account on a regular basis. Failure to read and react to University communications in a timely manner does not absolve the student from knowing and complying with the content of the communications. The University provides an e-mail forwarding service that allows students to read their e-mail via other service providers (e.g., Hotmail, AOL, Yahoo). Students that choose to forward their e-mail from their pitt.edu address to another address do so at their own risk. If e-mail is lost as a result of forwarding, it does not absolve the student from responding to official communications sent to their University e-mail address. To forward e-mail sent to your University account, go to http://accounts.pitt.edu, log into your account, click on Edit Forwarding Addresses, and follow the instructions on the page. Be sure to log out of your account when you have finished. (For the full E-mail Communication Policy, go to www.bc.pitt.edu/policy/09/09-10-01/html.)

 

Attendance: You are expected to attend all classes. Attendance is required for satisfactory progress through the course. If you are unable to attend a class, please notify me in advance. 

 

Make-up work/Late penalties: You are expected to turn in all assignments by their due date. Late assignments will be marked down 2 points for every day they are late. Please contact your instructor if you foresee any difficulty in meeting assignment deadlines. 

 

Support Services: 

Writing Center: Make use of the services of the Writing Center to improve your writing skills. 

 

Disability Resources and Services: "If you have a disability for which you are or may be requesting an accommodation, you are encouraged to contact both your instructor and the Office of Disability Resources and Services, 140 William Pitt Union, 412-648-7890/412-624-3346 (Fax), as early as possible in the term. Disability Resources and Services will verify your disability and determine reasonable accommodations for this course." 

 

 

The integrity of the academic process requires fair and impartial evaluation on the part of faculty and honest academic conduct on the part of students. To this end, students are expected to conduct themselves at a high level of responsibility in the fulfillment of the course of their study. It is the corresponding responsibility of faculty to make clear to students those standards by which students will be evaluated, and the resources available for use by students during the course of their study and evaluation. The educational process is perceived as a joint faculty-student enterprise which will perforce involve professional judgment by faculty and may involve – without penalty – reasoned exception by students to the data or views offered by faculty. Senate Committee on Tenure and Academic Freedom, February 1974.

Instructor

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