Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon

For long, the importance of fishing for forest societies has been hiding behind the term “hunter-gatherers”. Whereas the importance of hunting is commonly recognized among such societies, some research has also highlighted that fishing is a primordial resource for subsistence, as well as a key eleme...

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Main Authors: Sandrine Gallois, Romain Duda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire Éco-anthropologie et Ethnobiologie 2016-12-01
Series:Revue d'ethnoécologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/2818
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author Sandrine Gallois
Romain Duda
author_facet Sandrine Gallois
Romain Duda
author_sort Sandrine Gallois
collection DOAJ
description For long, the importance of fishing for forest societies has been hiding behind the term “hunter-gatherers”. Whereas the importance of hunting is commonly recognized among such societies, some research has also highlighted that fishing is a primordial resource for subsistence, as well as a key element in the cosmology of several forest societies. However, very few studies — and less so among Central African forest societies — have focused on fishing practices and their social, cultural and symbolic complexity. To contribute to fill this gap, we analyze fishing activities among two Baka communities from southeastern Cameroon, particularly focusing on fishing productivity as well as the ethnoecological specificities and the socio-cultural role of fishing. Data were collected through interviews and systematic observations of fishing activities carried out with children and adults and weekly interviews on productivity carried out during twelve months (n = 272 individuals). Results of this study highlight that fishing, and most specifically dam fishing, a collective women fishing technique, bears a specific place in Baka society. In contrast with hunting, whose value is mostly associated to the cultural valorization of the wild meat, the cultural importance of fishing is largely based on the activity in itself, through its socio-cultural dimension. Dam fishing creates a specific space where, in the absence of men, women create social cohesion through exchanges and sharing. Furthermore, dam fishing represents a privileged space for learning, because it allows not only the transmission of ethnoichthyological knowledge, but also the transmission of other aspects of cultural knowledge that shape the early gender differentiation between boys and girls. This paper aims to highlight the socio-cultural value of fishing activities in the livelihood of contemporary forest hunter-gatherers.
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spelling doaj-art-fe24ee950a7043d5aee7987e433da0ab2025-02-05T16:25:11ZengLaboratoire Éco-anthropologie et EthnobiologieRevue d'ethnoécologie2267-24192016-12-011010.4000/ethnoecologie.2818Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern CameroonSandrine GalloisRomain DudaFor long, the importance of fishing for forest societies has been hiding behind the term “hunter-gatherers”. Whereas the importance of hunting is commonly recognized among such societies, some research has also highlighted that fishing is a primordial resource for subsistence, as well as a key element in the cosmology of several forest societies. However, very few studies — and less so among Central African forest societies — have focused on fishing practices and their social, cultural and symbolic complexity. To contribute to fill this gap, we analyze fishing activities among two Baka communities from southeastern Cameroon, particularly focusing on fishing productivity as well as the ethnoecological specificities and the socio-cultural role of fishing. Data were collected through interviews and systematic observations of fishing activities carried out with children and adults and weekly interviews on productivity carried out during twelve months (n = 272 individuals). Results of this study highlight that fishing, and most specifically dam fishing, a collective women fishing technique, bears a specific place in Baka society. In contrast with hunting, whose value is mostly associated to the cultural valorization of the wild meat, the cultural importance of fishing is largely based on the activity in itself, through its socio-cultural dimension. Dam fishing creates a specific space where, in the absence of men, women create social cohesion through exchanges and sharing. Furthermore, dam fishing represents a privileged space for learning, because it allows not only the transmission of ethnoichthyological knowledge, but also the transmission of other aspects of cultural knowledge that shape the early gender differentiation between boys and girls. This paper aims to highlight the socio-cultural value of fishing activities in the livelihood of contemporary forest hunter-gatherers.https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/2818ethnoecologycultural transmissiongenderhunter-gathererBaka Pygmies
spellingShingle Sandrine Gallois
Romain Duda
Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon
Revue d'ethnoécologie
ethnoecology
cultural transmission
gender
hunter-gatherer
Baka Pygmies
title Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon
title_full Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon
title_fullStr Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon
title_short Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon
title_sort beyond productivity the socio cultural role of fishing among the baka of southeastern cameroon
topic ethnoecology
cultural transmission
gender
hunter-gatherer
Baka Pygmies
url https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/2818
work_keys_str_mv AT sandrinegallois beyondproductivitythesocioculturalroleoffishingamongthebakaofsoutheasterncameroon
AT romainduda beyondproductivitythesocioculturalroleoffishingamongthebakaofsoutheasterncameroon