TY - BOOK AU - Goldman,Irving AU - Wilson,Peter J. TI - Cubeo Hehénewa religious thought: metaphysics of a northwestern Amazonian people SN - 023150361X AV - BL2580 .G65 2004eb U1 - 299.8/835 22 PY - 2004/// CY - New York PB - Columbia University Press KW - Indians of South America KW - Religion KW - RELIGION KW - Ethnic & Tribal KW - bisacsh KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE KW - Anthropology KW - General KW - fast KW - Amazon River Region KW - Electronic book KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Creation and emergence -- Process in creation -- Social principles -- The social order -- The tribe -- The phratry from without -- The phratry from within -- The external role of the phratry: the sib -- The inner working of the sib -- Daily life at ground level -- The cosmic order -- The ritual order -- The order of being -- Analysis -- Rituals of training -- Death and mourning -- Dogma -- Rituals -- Instruments, implements and dances -- Shamans, jaguars, and thunderers -- History -- Becoming a payé and curing -- Concepts of power -- Gender N2 - The societies of Vaupes region are among the most documented indigenous cultures, in part because they are thought to resemble earlier civilizations lost during initial colonial conflict, and students and scholars are eagerly awaiting the publication of this posthumous work by the man widely regarded as the preeminent authority on Vaupes Amazonian societies. Cubeo Hehenewa Religious Thought will be the definitive account of the religion of a significant Amazonian culture. Cubeo religious thought is truly a philosophy that incorporates ideas about the nature of the cosmos, society, and human life; the individual's orientation to the world; the use of hallucinogenic substances; and mystical dimensions akin to certain ideas of Eastern religions. This volume was substantially completed before Irving Goldman's death, but Peter Wilson has edited it for publication, providing an introduction to Goldman's work. Stephen Hugh-Jones has contributed an afterword, setting the work in the context of Vaupes ethnography UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=107233 ER -