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Art and Residence Among the Shipibo Indians of Peru: A Study in Microacculturation
Author(s) -
Roe Peter G.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
american anthropologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.51
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1548-1433
pISSN - 0002-7294
DOI - 10.1525/aa.1980.82.1.02a00030
Subject(s) - residence , acculturation , style (visual arts) , sociology , homogeneous , girl , presupposition , anthropology , art , geography , ethnology , demography , ethnic group , psychology , epistemology , visual arts , philosophy , mathematics , developmental psychology , combinatorics
The geometric decorative art of the Shipibo Indians, Peruvian montaña, is produced by women balanced between a cultural imperative for personal innovation and submission to the constraints of traditional style. The experimental commissioning of painted Shipibo textile samplers using a rule‐based approach reveals that additional variables in the Deetz‐Longacre hypothesis associating female stylistic uniformity with matrilineal descent and matrilocal residence, such as the number of elements and rules used and the higher position in a hierarchy of complexity such solutions occupy, contribute to aesthetic micro‐acculturation. That is done in the Shipibo case in a way that belies the presupposition that the mother is always the most important mentor in a girl's art, while supporting this archaeological theory's prediction that a group of coresiding females produces relatively homogeneous art. [ethnoarchaeology, art‐style analysis, Deetz‐Longacre hypothesis, South American Indians, Peru, Shipibo]