La terre vue du golfe

Immersed in a world that echoes a sentiment of abysmal loss (disappearance of cultural diversity, global warming, etc.), the contemporary man’s quest is now to preserve this endangered heritage. From the perspective of an urgent ethnography, indigenous peoples offer the perfect image of the heir, on...

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Published in:ELOHI
Main Author: Allamel, Frédéric
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:French
Published: Presses universitaires de Bordeaux 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4000/elohi.231
http://journals.openedition.org/elohi/231
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:qfxPNZGT_zGm-bqwe7eaT 2023-05-15T16:17:01+02:00 La terre vue du golfe Earth seen from the Gulf Allamel, Frédéric 2012-01-01 https://doi.org/10.4000/elohi.231 http://journals.openedition.org/elohi/231 fr fre Presses universitaires de Bordeaux ELOHI urn:doi:10.4000/elohi.231 doi:10.4000/elohi.231 http://journals.openedition.org/elohi/231 other undefined ELOHI amérindien anthropologie de l’espace dynamisme culturel écocide ethnocide Native Americans anthropology of space cultural dynamism anthro-se hist Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2012 fttriple https://doi.org/10.4000/elohi.231 2023-01-22T18:54:17Z Immersed in a world that echoes a sentiment of abysmal loss (disappearance of cultural diversity, global warming, etc.), the contemporary man’s quest is now to preserve this endangered heritage. From the perspective of an urgent ethnography, indigenous peoples offer the perfect image of the heir, one who possesses an ecosophic wisdom, which relates to the harmonious relationship to the land—a dimension that is often forgotten in today’s world. This perception is only partially correct. Moreover, this rather static attitude freezes the inventiveness of first nations in relation to their environment. The Houma Indians, people of the marshes of southeast Louisiana, have not inherited their current territory. Dispossessed of their ancestral land where they subsisted on agriculture, they have found refuge in this coastal area in the early nineteenth century. Thus deprived of their spatial cues and their traditional pattern of subsistence, they had no choice but to tame a hostile environment and to entirely reconstruct their material culture that was now dependent on water. Not only have they since become fishermen, trappers and gatherers, but also their worldview completely changed, switching its focus from the land to the bayous, the lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. This essay focuses on the dynamic mechanisms for understanding space and the gradual development of a new sense of place. Addressing the current environmental situation (ecocide), it ultimately demonstrates the limits that indigenous people now face in reconstructing and sustaining their identity on a territory that will soon vanish. Plongé dans un monde qui ne lui renvoie en écho que le sentiment d’une perte abyssale (réchauffement climatique, réduction de la diversité culturelle, etc.), l’homme contemporain s’est mis en quête de préserver cet héritage en péril. Dans ce qu’il convient d’appeler une ethnographie d’urgence, les peuples indigènes offrent alors la figure du parfait héritier, celui qui détient cette sagesse écosophique énonciatrice d’un ... Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Unknown ELOHI 1 53 69
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language French
topic amérindien
anthropologie de l’espace
dynamisme culturel
écocide
ethnocide
Native Americans
anthropology of space
cultural dynamism
anthro-se
hist
spellingShingle amérindien
anthropologie de l’espace
dynamisme culturel
écocide
ethnocide
Native Americans
anthropology of space
cultural dynamism
anthro-se
hist
Allamel, Frédéric
La terre vue du golfe
topic_facet amérindien
anthropologie de l’espace
dynamisme culturel
écocide
ethnocide
Native Americans
anthropology of space
cultural dynamism
anthro-se
hist
description Immersed in a world that echoes a sentiment of abysmal loss (disappearance of cultural diversity, global warming, etc.), the contemporary man’s quest is now to preserve this endangered heritage. From the perspective of an urgent ethnography, indigenous peoples offer the perfect image of the heir, one who possesses an ecosophic wisdom, which relates to the harmonious relationship to the land—a dimension that is often forgotten in today’s world. This perception is only partially correct. Moreover, this rather static attitude freezes the inventiveness of first nations in relation to their environment. The Houma Indians, people of the marshes of southeast Louisiana, have not inherited their current territory. Dispossessed of their ancestral land where they subsisted on agriculture, they have found refuge in this coastal area in the early nineteenth century. Thus deprived of their spatial cues and their traditional pattern of subsistence, they had no choice but to tame a hostile environment and to entirely reconstruct their material culture that was now dependent on water. Not only have they since become fishermen, trappers and gatherers, but also their worldview completely changed, switching its focus from the land to the bayous, the lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. This essay focuses on the dynamic mechanisms for understanding space and the gradual development of a new sense of place. Addressing the current environmental situation (ecocide), it ultimately demonstrates the limits that indigenous people now face in reconstructing and sustaining their identity on a territory that will soon vanish. Plongé dans un monde qui ne lui renvoie en écho que le sentiment d’une perte abyssale (réchauffement climatique, réduction de la diversité culturelle, etc.), l’homme contemporain s’est mis en quête de préserver cet héritage en péril. Dans ce qu’il convient d’appeler une ethnographie d’urgence, les peuples indigènes offrent alors la figure du parfait héritier, celui qui détient cette sagesse écosophique énonciatrice d’un ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Allamel, Frédéric
author_facet Allamel, Frédéric
author_sort Allamel, Frédéric
title La terre vue du golfe
title_short La terre vue du golfe
title_full La terre vue du golfe
title_fullStr La terre vue du golfe
title_full_unstemmed La terre vue du golfe
title_sort la terre vue du golfe
publisher Presses universitaires de Bordeaux
publishDate 2012
url https://doi.org/10.4000/elohi.231
http://journals.openedition.org/elohi/231
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
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