Abstract
Based on field study and historical accounts, this article is an analysis of the symbolic construction of hostility and violent relations between Andamanese hunters and neighbouring settlers around the reserve forests. Using the culturally articulated notions of anger and peace, the article compares the event of pig hunting with Andamanese killing of outsiders. Are acts of violence a means of articulating the politics and mutually reflected images of the ‘other’ between Andamanese and outside settlers on the islands?
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