Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925

This article uses a gender-based approach to study the different representations of Shuar marriage developed by Salesian missionaries. The study covers the 1893-1925 period, which witnessed the earliest arrival of the Salesian missionaries into de Gualaquiza-Mendez Apostolic Vicariate, in what is no...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rosana Posligua
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Sede Ecuador 2021-05-01
Series:Íconos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.flacsoandes.edu.ec/iconos/article/view/4668
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832572729847447552
author Rosana Posligua
author_facet Rosana Posligua
author_sort Rosana Posligua
collection DOAJ
description This article uses a gender-based approach to study the different representations of Shuar marriage developed by Salesian missionaries. The study covers the 1893-1925 period, which witnessed the earliest arrival of the Salesian missionaries into de Gualaquiza-Mendez Apostolic Vicariate, in what is now the Morona-Santiago province in Ecuador. This territory is located in the ill-defined southern Ecuadorian-Peruvian Amazonian border. It is inhabited by several aents chicham indigenous ethnic groups which include the shuar, achuar, wampis, awajún y shiwiar peoples. This article is based in a previous qualitative and historical investigation of the written accounts made by the Salesian priests in the period under study. The article makes the assumption that gender is a historically flexible category, which is expressed differently according to the specific contexts where it operates. It becomes evident that the ways in which the Salesian missionaries understood men and women, the place of women throughout their lifecycle, and the stereotypes through they comprehend gender are directly derived from a binary and androcentric standpoint. This approach is closely connected with the main objective of the missionaries in the period under study: provide a legitimate rationale for their efforts to evangelize the local population.
format Article
id doaj-art-05733708ac7a436c932d43efce7044e0
institution Kabale University
issn 1390-1249
2224-6983
language Spanish
publishDate 2021-05-01
publisher Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Sede Ecuador
record_format Article
series Íconos
spelling doaj-art-05733708ac7a436c932d43efce7044e02025-02-02T07:47:31ZspaFacultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Sede EcuadorÍconos1390-12492224-69832021-05-012570799410.17141/iconos.70.2021.4668Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925Rosana Posliguahttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6253-656XThis article uses a gender-based approach to study the different representations of Shuar marriage developed by Salesian missionaries. The study covers the 1893-1925 period, which witnessed the earliest arrival of the Salesian missionaries into de Gualaquiza-Mendez Apostolic Vicariate, in what is now the Morona-Santiago province in Ecuador. This territory is located in the ill-defined southern Ecuadorian-Peruvian Amazonian border. It is inhabited by several aents chicham indigenous ethnic groups which include the shuar, achuar, wampis, awajún y shiwiar peoples. This article is based in a previous qualitative and historical investigation of the written accounts made by the Salesian priests in the period under study. The article makes the assumption that gender is a historically flexible category, which is expressed differently according to the specific contexts where it operates. It becomes evident that the ways in which the Salesian missionaries understood men and women, the place of women throughout their lifecycle, and the stereotypes through they comprehend gender are directly derived from a binary and androcentric standpoint. This approach is closely connected with the main objective of the missionaries in the period under study: provide a legitimate rationale for their efforts to evangelize the local population.https://revistas.flacsoandes.edu.ec/iconos/article/view/4668amazoniastereotypesgendermarriagereligious missionshuar
spellingShingle Rosana Posligua
Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925
Íconos
amazonia
stereotypes
gender
marriage
religious mission
shuar
title Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925
title_full Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925
title_fullStr Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925
title_full_unstemmed Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925
title_short Wedding mirages: Salesian representations of the Shuar marriage¸1893-1925
title_sort wedding mirages salesian representations of the shuar marriage¸1893 1925
topic amazonia
stereotypes
gender
marriage
religious mission
shuar
url https://revistas.flacsoandes.edu.ec/iconos/article/view/4668
work_keys_str_mv AT rosanaposligua weddingmiragessalesianrepresentationsoftheshuarmarriage18931925