KAYAPO-COMING
OF AGE
30
minutes Colour 1982
Film maker: Peter Ramsden
Anthropologist: Terence Turner
The
Kayapo belong to a group of ancient tribal societies that have inhabited
their present area in Central Brazil since well before the beginning
of the Christian era. The first part of this film shows the building
up of the extended family and age-set structures, with emphasis
on the parallelism between the hierarchical patterns of deference,
symbolic subordination and dominance at each level. This part culminates
in a series of vignettes of the life of the senior men of the `fathers-of-many-children'
age set, both in the extended family household setting and in the
men's house. These scenes emphasize the stylistic range running
from relaxed, spontaneous assertiveness to the flamboyant display
of public oratory. The orator is Ukakoro, one of the traditional
`chiefs' who are authorised to perform the ben chants, which, Rop-ni, a Kayapo political leader, despite his
influence, cannot do. Ten years ago Ukakoro and another chief opposed
Rop-ni in a major political crisis; they lost and the other leader,
with about a third of the original population, left the village
and settled elsewhere. Ukakoro stayed but has lost virtually all
his effective political leadership to Rop-ni. The latter, however,
cannot perform the ben
chants, so either Ukakoro or Yobau, who delivers the chant which
occurs later in the film, must perform them for him.
In
the second part, the film shows the mobilisation of a ceremonial
fishing expedition under Rop-ni's leadership. We see Rop-ni orating
and leading the dancing in fine style, but we also see him carefully
gauging the right moment to call for the dancing to begin. It is
obvious that he is straining every nerve to make sure that he does
not put himself in the embarrassing position of a leader without
followers. He is, in a word, exercising `leadership'. When the men
assemble at the fishing site, we see Yobau leap forward to deliver
the short but indispensible ben
chant which sets in motion the final move into the water, and follows
a fine bit of oratory by a senior man. This is appropriate in the
context of a collective activity by all the men of the village,
and shows the way in which the values attached to the senior man's
role and those attaching to the society as a political whole are
closely identified. The film was made as part of the BBC series,
Other People's Lives.
A study guide for the series is available from the RAI, price £3.50.
Catalogue
number (16mm): 3RA117 £9.
[See
The Kayapo-Out of the Forest
for bibliography.]
[See Kayapo-Out of the Forest for bibliography.]
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