dc.description.abstract | This thesis is about the personhood of mountains in the southern Peruvian Andes and
the ways in which Quechua-speaking people called Runakuna attempt to enter into reciprocal
yet asymmetric exchange relations with them. As I slowly came to understand, mountains are
incredibly powerful persons who crystalize and control the flow of a life-giving and death-dealing “force” or “power” called animu that is unequally distributed throughout the region. In
this thesis, I show how animu tends to get consumed, stored up, and concentrated in some
“things” more than others—above all, mountains—and how different ritual techniques are
employed in order to get the animu opened up and flowing again along less congested and
contained lines. These ritual techniques of “opening up” include actions such as blowing on
coca leaves, pouring alcohol into the ground, throwing holy water into the air, taking crosses
from a glacier, dancing in a corral, and walking with icons to a pilgrimage shrine. I propose
that these practices, among others that I describe, are ways of sharing animu with the mountains
in the hope that the mountains will give animu in return; however, given the hierarchical
structure in which these exchanges take place, that return is not always guaranteed. Mountains
are capricious, and I argue that exchange relations with them follow a logic of sacrifice which
can end up reinforcing and not only reproducing but even exacerbating the very structure that
is being contested if no return from the more powerful mountain is made. Without a return to
the initial sacrificial gift, mountains just get bigger through the consumption of the sacrifice,
and the mountain’s fractal and hierarchically encompassing structure expands. In addition to
making a contribution to Andean ethnography, this thesis aims to participate in conceptual
debates about nonhuman personhood through discussing the ways in which rituals make
various features of the environment into particular kinds of persons that are continually being
reassigned to different positions in the socio-cosmic hierarchy. | en |