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Film Screening: Yagé is Our Life

Dates:19 October 2016
Times:17:00 - 19:00
What is it:Screening
Organiser:School of Arts, Languages and Cultures
Speaker:Lúcia Sá
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  • In category "Screening"
  • In group "(ALC) Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies"
  • In group "(ALC) Spanish Portuguese and Latin American Studies"
  • By School of Arts, Languages and Cultures

Venue: Granada Centre, Arthur Lewis Building. The film will be presented by the filmmakers and will be followed by some reflections on the film by Professor Lúcia Sá (University of Manchester).

"Yage is Our Life" is a film about the indigenous people of Putumayo, Colombia, their relationship with Yage and their perceptions on the commercialisation of their traditional medicine.

Indigenous groups living in the Putumayo region of southern Colombia have been using Yage (Ayahuasca) for the health, social cohesion and spiritual guidance of their communities for centuries. Yage is rich in the potent psychedelic substance DMT and for these indigenous groups it is sacred, allowing them access to ancient wisdom and the spirits of nature. In their ceremonies the Taitas, or traditional doctors, use Yage to treat their patients for physical and emotional illnesses and as a guide for making decisions.

Over the past 500 years the ancestral territories of Putumayo have been gradually eroded and these communities are at risk of further loss of land and traditions. In recent years Yage, or Ayahuasca, has become increasingly well-known in Western society. Many people travel each year to the Amazon to experience its effects and many scientific studies are being undertaken into its medicinal properties. As a result of this growing interest there have been numerous cases of people posing as Taitas and offering Yage ceremonies for large sums of money both in Colombia as well as internationally.

This film voices the concerns of indigenous leaders through a series of interviews where they discuss the importance of Yage as a living tradition in their communities, the threat of its commercialisation, and the pressures exerted on their homelands by industrialised civilisation.

Speaker

Lúcia Sá

Role: Professor in Brazilian Cultural Studies

Organisation: The University of Manchester

  • http://www.manchester.ac.uk/research/Lucia.sa/

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Granada Centre for Visual Anthropology
Arthur Lewis Building
Manchester

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Dr James Scorer

james.scorer@manchester.ac.uk

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