This article examines notions of disease and geontology among the Akawaio people of Guyana within the context of COVID-19. It begins with an ethnographic encounter that one of the authors experienced at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and examines its ramifications through an in-depth analysis of Akawaio concepts concerning pathogenesis in contexts of malevolent human and other-than-human agency, as well as Akawaio histories of resisting encroachments and predations by Europeans and other outsiders in the broader region. Centred around local notions of ‘spoiling’ through sorcery-related interventions or infractions against certain ethical norms, the article considers ontologies that framed and contextualised the COVID-19 pandemic for many Akawaio people in the Upper Mazaruni River basin of Guyana.
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James Andrew Whitaker
Daniel G. Cooper
University of Southern Mississippi
College of Marin
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Whitaker et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/696c7791eb60fb80d1395cee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.82256/jaso.v17i1.408