ABSTRACT
The present article seeks a reflection on land regularization processes in which different forms of knowledge intersect. The starting point is a set of experiments related to studies of indigenous land identification in the southern state of Amazonas. The intention is to point at possibilities of different contextual readings. If on the one hand the anthropologist must write a report containing a map that establishes the boundaries of an indigenous land, on the other hand he must understand the confluence of the constitutive relations of a collective and its place. If the production of a text and a map are intended for future readings (legal and anthropological), the registers of places, based on events that combine sociality and sociability, are also a form of language.
KEYWORDS
South American indigenous; Tupi-Kagwahiva; indigenous territory