Nayaka people: Difference between revisions

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=Culture=
=Culture=


"The communnity is egalitarian," reports Nurit Bird-David.<ref>Nurit Bird-David, "The Nayaka of the Wynaad, South India" in ''The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers'' ed. Richard B. Lee and Richard H. Daly (1999).
"The communnity is egalitarian," reports anthropologist Nurit Bird-David.<ref>Nurit Bird-David, "The Nayaka of the Wynaad, South India" in ''The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers'' ed. Richard B. Lee and Richard H. Daly (1999).</ref>
 
The Nayaka consider each other, and even outside visitors, to be kin, and they address each other in kinship terms such as "my big-uncle" or "my sister-in-law."<ref>Nurit Bird-David, "'Animism' Revisited: Personhood, Environment, and Relational Epistemology," ''Current Anthropology'' 40, No. S1 (1999): S73.</ref>


A couple who sleeps together and shares foraging duties and domestic chores eventually becomes recognized as married, without a marriage ceremony. A married couple and their children live together, although sometimes newly weds temporarily live with the bride's family.<ref>Bird-David, "The Nayaka."</ref>
A couple who sleeps together and shares foraging duties and domestic chores eventually becomes recognized as married, without a marriage ceremony. A married couple and their children live together, although sometimes newly weds temporarily live with the bride's family.<ref>Bird-David, "The Nayaka."</ref>


=Economy=
=Economy=
Sharing is central to Nayaka culture. There's a strong expectation that a Nayaka share food with all present. If a Nayaka asks another for something, giving it is the norm.<ref>Bird-David, "'Animism' Revisited", S72.</ref>


The Nayaka diet is mainly based on foraged yams, nuts, honey, and fish, along with purchased or bartererd rice. Hunting is rare, but game include deer, lizards and pigs.<ref>Bird-David, "The Nayaka."</ref>
The Nayaka diet is mainly based on foraged yams, nuts, honey, and fish, along with purchased or bartererd rice. Hunting is rare, but game include deer, lizards and pigs.<ref>Bird-David, "The Nayaka."</ref>

Latest revision as of 15:48, 14 January 2025

The Nayaka are an egalitarian foraging people in South India.

Culture

"The communnity is egalitarian," reports anthropologist Nurit Bird-David.[1]

The Nayaka consider each other, and even outside visitors, to be kin, and they address each other in kinship terms such as "my big-uncle" or "my sister-in-law."[2]

A couple who sleeps together and shares foraging duties and domestic chores eventually becomes recognized as married, without a marriage ceremony. A married couple and their children live together, although sometimes newly weds temporarily live with the bride's family.[3]

Economy

Sharing is central to Nayaka culture. There's a strong expectation that a Nayaka share food with all present. If a Nayaka asks another for something, giving it is the norm.[4]

The Nayaka diet is mainly based on foraged yams, nuts, honey, and fish, along with purchased or bartererd rice. Hunting is rare, but game include deer, lizards and pigs.[5]

Environment

The Nayaka cosmovision is traditionally animistic and reveres the naturalistic devaru (spirits) and ancestors that inhabit the forest. The religion has also incorporated minor deities of Hindu neighbors.[6]

  1. Nurit Bird-David, "The Nayaka of the Wynaad, South India" in The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers ed. Richard B. Lee and Richard H. Daly (1999).
  2. Nurit Bird-David, "'Animism' Revisited: Personhood, Environment, and Relational Epistemology," Current Anthropology 40, No. S1 (1999): S73.
  3. Bird-David, "The Nayaka."
  4. Bird-David, "'Animism' Revisited", S72.
  5. Bird-David, "The Nayaka."
  6. Bird-David, "The Nayaka."