Sal/manteca/panela : ethnoveterinary practice in highland Ecuador.
Material type: ArticlePublication details: Arlington American Antropological Association 2000Subject(s): In: American anthropologistSummary: In this essay, I analyze the feeding of salt, lard, and raw sugar balls to cattle, as practiced in the southern Ecuadorian highlands. These balls provide nutritional satisfaction for cattle and conceptual satisfaction for their owners. Domestic animals are understood to share many human characteristics, needs, and desires. The metaphoric extension of these traits to cattle responds to the quest not only for cognitive order, but also for the pragmatic purposes of management in an uncertain and precarious agrarian environment,Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Analítica de revista | Biblioteca Central Colección General | General | AM. ANTHROPOL.-02/00 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | FICTICIO152 |
En: American Anthropologist. -- Vol. 102 No. 2 (junio 2000), pp. 290-302. ISSN 00027294
In this essay, I analyze the feeding of salt, lard, and raw sugar balls to cattle, as practiced in the southern Ecuadorian highlands. These balls provide nutritional satisfaction for cattle and conceptual satisfaction for their owners. Domestic animals are understood to share many human characteristics, needs, and desires. The metaphoric extension of these traits to cattle responds to the quest not only for cognitive order, but also for the pragmatic purposes of management in an uncertain and precarious agrarian environment,
There are no comments on this title.