Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 122
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-78661-629-6 • Hardback • September 2020 • $140.00 • (£108.00)
978-1-5381-4830-3 • Paperback • June 2024 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-78661-630-2 • eBook • September 2020 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
Juan Alejandro Chindoy Chindoy is Lecturer in Moral and Political Philosophy at Caldas University, Manizales, Colombia, and Lecturer in Philosophy of Law and Hermeneutics at Universidad Católica Luis Amigó, Manizales, Colombia.
Introduction- Generalities of Kamëntšá Culture
- A Philosophical Approach to Kamëntšá Culture
Chapter 1 – Time in Kamëntšá Culture- Two Conceptions of Time
- Time as History
- Sibundoy at the Time of the Early Spanish Conquistadors
- Carlos Tamabioy’s Legacy in Land Ownership
- Capuchin Missionaries and the Division of Land in the Sibundoy Valley
- Time as Primary Experience
- Storytelling as Constituted Symbol
- Scholarship on Storytelling as Constituted Symbol
- Storytelling as Constituting Symbol
- Conclusion
Chapter 2 – Beauty in Kamëntšá Culture- Bëtskanté as Constituted Symbol
- From Bëtsknaté to Clestrinӱë
- Bëtsknaté as a Constituting Symbol: An Experience of Dancing
- The Philosophical Significance of Kamëntšá Dancing
- Conclusion
Chapter 3 – Spirit in Kamëntšá Culture- Native Doctors and Rituals of Healing: The Constituted Nature of Rituals
- Scholarly Descriptions of Yajé
- Yajé ceremonies in Sibundoy: The Constituting Aspects of Yajé
- Conclusion
ConclusionBibliography
With a decidedly didactic tone and in dialogue with the American philosophical tradition, Chindoy articulates communal history and personal experience to introduce the Western reader to Time, Beauty, and Spirit as living forces in the Kamëntšá culture. It is in the transformative effects of its reading that this concise volume becomes, in the author’s words, a beautiful and meaningful conversation.
— Enrique Alejandro Basabe, lecturer in foreign languages, Universidad Nacional de La Pampa
With a decidedly didactic tone and in dialogue with the American philosophical tradition, Chindoy articulates communal history and personal experience to introduce the Western reader to Time, Beauty, and Spirit as living forces in the Kamëntšá culture. It is in the transformative effects of its reading that this concise volume becomes, in the author’s words, a beautiful and meaningful conversation.
— Enrique Alejandro Basabe, lecturer in foreign languages, Universidad Nacional de La Pampa
This book offers a vivid investigation into the South American symbolic representations (Time, Beauty, Spirit) as well as decolonial practices of Sibundoy tribes. The Author fruitfully applies William James’s radical empiricism in his veracious analyzes of tribal storytelling, dance and rituals of healing, fittingly illustrating them with his personal ritual experiences as a member of Kamëntšá tribe.
— Anna Kawalec, associate professor of philosophy, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin