O Uso Ritual
da Ayahuasca. Beatriz Caiuby
Labate and Wladimyr Sena Araújo, eds. Campinas: Mercado Letras, 2002. 686 pp.
PETER GOW
University of St. Andrews
In eastern Peru, local people say
that the hallucinogen ayahuasca "makes you see everything." What
"everything" might be varies from person to person, as the volume
under review beautifully illustrates. It is a collection of articles, some
already published in languages other than Portuguese, which provides a very
comprehensive and fascinating overview of the ritual use of ayahuasca in a
remarkably diverse series of settings in South America and beyond.
The book is divided into three
sections. The first, "Ayahuasca among the Peoples of the Forest,"
comprises a series of articles primarily focused on the use of this
hallucinogen among indigenous peoples of western Amazonia, among mestizo
peoples in Peru, and among rubber gatherers of Acre state in Brazil. The second
section, "The Brazilian Ayahuasquero Religions," is comprised of a
series of articles that provide a very important and timely overview of the
religious movements that emerged in Acre in the 1930s, which have historically
spread throughout Brazil and then the world. "Pharmacological, Medical and
Psychological Studies of Ayahuasca" addresses the nature of ayahuasca and
analogous hallucinogens in terms of the psychoactive properties and the
implications of these properties for the study of the phenomenology of
ayahuasca experience and for the study of the mind.
The quality of the articles, as with
the preface by Mauro Almeida and the editors' introduction, is in general very
high. The editors are to be praised for having brought all of this data
together in one place. There is no overall theoretical coherence to the volume,
but that is not intended as a criticism. The diverse range of settings for the
ritual use of ayahuasca has presented analysts (anthropologist as well as
scholars from other disciplines) with a topic that is not easy to address.
While it is clear that people taking this hallucinogen in a remote part of
eastern Peru and in an apartment in Amsterdam are doing roughly the same thing,
and that the two acts have a demonstrable historical connection, it is far from
obvious how these two actions are to be connected analytically. This may
explain the strange atavistic way the book is divided into the three sections,
which can be seen as a triad of tradition, religion, and mind. This triad
reminded me of Sir James Frazer's evolutionary typology of magic, religion, and
science: a curiosity in relation to a topic that might seem more amenable to
postmodern approaches. Indeed, the division of the book into sections strikes
me as implicitly evolutionist in a way that actually obscures important
features of the phenomenon it addresses. It may seem obvious that ayahuasca use
among indigenous peoples is traditional, in contrast to its manifest novelty in
the new ayahuasca religions of Brazil and in neoshamanism. However, the
time-depth of the ritual use of ayahuasca by any given indigenous people is
assumed rather than demonstrated. There is good evidence that various
indigenous peoples in western Amazonia have adopted the use of ayahuasca, or at
least the particular style in which it is used, quite recently. This is hardly
surprising, given the inherently transformational nature of the ayahuasca
experience itself.
The division of the chapters
reflects, I think, the editors' intuition that the subject is only beginning to
be properly explored. Therefore, the different sections reflect less a natural
classification of the problem and more an invitation to read across. One point
of departure for such "readings across" that I recommend, especially
for those attracted to the use of ayahuasca for voyaging in the mind, is
Barbara Keiffenheim's fascinating account of the Cashinahua experiences with
the hallucinogen.
Two features make this volume
especially interesting. First, it is a testament to the remarkable fertility of
Brazilian anthropology. Second, the volume crosses frontiers in ways that run
counter to habitual modes of thinking. In particular, the historical expansion
of ayahuasca use among rubber tappers in Acre, beautifully documented in this
volume, shows that the frontier between Brazil and Peru had a very different
meaning to local people than to the agents of the nation states that created
it. As an old rubber tapper told me on the Purús River in 1987, referring to
the war that fixed this frontier, "In truth, this land is neither Brazil
nor Peru, it is the land of the Indians." In a charming response to such
basic rubber tapper wisdom, the editors conclude their acknowledgements with
one to ayahuasca itself, in the Spanish of Peruvian Amazonia.
American Anthropologist, vol. 106,
number 3, sep. 2004, p. 624.