How indigenous spiritual beliefs shape health-related consumption rituals: shipibo health rituals to tackle covid-19
ISSN: 1352-2752
Article publication date: 6 August 2024
Issue publication date: 29 October 2024
Abstract
Purpose
In marketing and consumer research, the study of Indigenous ideas and rituals remains limited. The authors present an Indigenous-informed study of consumption rituals co-produced with members of the Shipibo–Konibo Indigenous group of the Peruvian Amazon. Specifically, the authors worked with the Comando Matico, a group of Shipibos from Pucallpa, Peru. This study aims to investigate how Indigenous spiritual beliefs shape health-related consumption rituals by focusing on the experience of the Shipibos and their response to COVID-19.
Design/methodology/approach
Drawing upon the principles of Indigenous research, the authors co-produced this study with the Comando Matico. The authors collaboratively discussed the research project’s design, analysed and interpreted data and co-authored this study with members of the Comando Matico. This study uses discourse analyses. The corpus of discourse is speech and text produced by the Comando Matico in webinars and online interviews during the COVID-19 pandemic. The full and active participation of the Comando Matico informed the discourse analysis by ensuring Indigenous knowledge, and worldviews were infused throughout the process.
Findings
The authors foreground how Indigenous spiritual beliefs act as a force that imbues the knowledge and practice of health, wellbeing and illness, and this process shapes the performance of rituals. In Indigenous contexts, multiple spirits coexist with consumers, who adhere to specific rituals to respond to and relate to these spirits. Indigenous consumption rituals involve the participation of non-human beings (called rao, ibo, yoshin and chaikoni by the Shipibos) and this aspect challenges the traditional notion of rituals and ritual elements in marketing.
Originality/value
The authors demonstrate how Indigenous spiritual beliefs shape consumption rituals in the context of health and draw attention to how the acknowledgement of alternative ontologies and epistemologies can help address dominant hierarchies of knowledge in marketing theory.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Nathaly Aya Pastrana, PhD, for constructive feedback on the early version of this manuscript. The authors also thank the two anonymous reviewers who contributed helpful comments to strengthen the manuscript.
Funding: This work was supported by Queensland University of Technology (QUT) through the QUT Postgraduate Research Award (QUT P RA) scholarship.
Declaration of interest: No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Citation
Cateriano-Arévalo, E., Gordon, R., Soria Gonzáles (Pene Beso), J.J., Soria Gonzáles (Xawan Nita), R.M., Paiva Pinedo (Sanken Bea), N., Pesantes, M.A. and Schuster, L. (2024), "How indigenous spiritual beliefs shape health-related consumption rituals: shipibo health rituals to tackle covid-19", Qualitative Market Research, Vol. 27 No. 5, pp. 892-920. https://doi.org/10.1108/QMR-05-2023-0071
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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