Le passage de la frontière

For three ethnic groups that practiced capture war (Aztecs, Iroquois and Tupinamba), the ritual that started with capture and continued beyond the execution served to assimilate the prisoner with his conqueror, the Other with the Self. Various steps in this transformation are seen as various moments...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Claude François Baudez
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative 2012-12-01
Series:Ateliers d'Anthropologie
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/9198
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Summary:For three ethnic groups that practiced capture war (Aztecs, Iroquois and Tupinamba), the ritual that started with capture and continued beyond the execution served to assimilate the prisoner with his conqueror, the Other with the Self. Various steps in this transformation are seen as various moments of the crossing of a thick boundary. Whereas this boundary can only be permanently crossed through the execution of the captive, the steps that precede it present him as a person with an ambiguous status, both enemy and parent, hostile and impotent.
ISSN:2117-3869