Henrique Márcio Couto
Fundação Santa Casa de Misericórdia do Pará.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos. 2009 Oct-Dec;16(4):981-98. doi: 10.1590/s0104-59702009000400008.
This discussion of the relations between folklore and popular medicine in the Amazon takes Canuto Azevedo's story "Filhos do boto" (Children of the porpoise) as an analytical reference point. Replete with elements of cultural reality, folk tales can serve as historical testimonies expressing clashes between different traditions. Folk records are fruit of what is often a quarrelsome dialogue between folklorists, social scientists, physicians, and pajés and their followers, and their analysis should take into account the conditions under which they were produced. Based on the imaginary attached to the figure of the porpoise--a seductive creature with healing powers--the article explores how we might expand knowledge of popular medicine as practiced in the Amazon, where the shamanistic rite known as pajelança cabocla has a strong presence.
关于亚马逊地区民俗与大众医学之间关系的讨论,以卡努托·阿泽维多的故事《江豚之子》作为分析参考点。民间故事充满了文化现实元素,可作为表达不同传统之间冲突的历史见证。民俗记录往往是民俗学家、社会科学家、医生、帕热(pajé,当地巫师)及其追随者之间激烈争论的产物,对它们的分析应考虑到其产生的条件。基于与江豚形象相关的想象——一种具有治愈能力的迷人生物,本文探讨了如何拓展我们对亚马逊地区大众医学实践的认识,在该地区,被称为卡波克拉帕热兰萨(pajelança cabocla)的萨满仪式盛行。