The Yanomamo (CASE STUDIES IN CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY)
D**L
The Fierce Nabas
Who says we can't learn anything from primitive peoples? Napolean Chagnon writes a book about the "fierce people," an Amazonian tribe that values violent passion above all, and low and behold -- the Nabas (Norte Americanos) all divide up into tribes and start shooting arrows (or is that errors?) at one another. Chagnon and his fellow "anthros" start wars to film people fight, engage in germ warfare, and don't care about the people they live among. The missionaries give shotguns away that are used for murder, practice cultural imperialism, and work for the CIA. (I believe Hugo Chavez himself pointed that out!) Some guy named Tierney is a dishonest scholar. (Apparently they got that one right, anyway!)So pick your team, and grab a club.Meanwhile, if you want a good book about a primitive tribe, both this and Spirit of the Rainforest make great reads, even though they come from opposing factions. Their portrayal of the Yanomamo is generally consistent and fascinating, in a sometimes horrifying way. Chagnon's is more detailed, a bit more objective (though he is certainly not afraid of voicing his opinions, and the personal style and details make the book so much more interesting than just an academic abstract on an Indian tribe).I appreciated the detail Chagnon offers: the kinds of plants used for arrows, the size of villages, family relations -- though he offered a bit more of that than I wanted -- diet, dance, death, even a bit about "pets."Spirit of the Rainforest is an even better read, and tells you a lot about the Yanomamo as well. My recommendation: read both. Chagnon didn't always stay in the same village, either.Sometimes Chagnon touches on what for many may be the most interesting question. To what extent does the violent lifestyle of the Yanomamo reflect that of our own "common ancestors?" Is this what it was like for Cain and Abel?I've been reading a very interesting, but more difficult book lately called Prehistory of the Americas, which helps answer some of these questions for me. It seems that the earliest tribes were, like the Yanomamo, small kinship groups -- even smaller, wandering bands, mostly living on big game. (mammoths, etc). Graves seem to suggest at times more equality between the sexes, and perhaps less violence, though I'm still a little unsure about that.What is shocking is that settled peoples in the Americas seem to become, if anything, less attractive. Their diet goes south (food does not seem to be the problem for the Yanomamo), and then hierarchy develops, slavery, and human sacrifice, which seems to get worse as time goes by. Nor is Sumer much better. All of which is to say, I am coming in the process to appreciate our great prophets more -- Confucius, Lao Zi, Epictetus, Buddha, Isaiah, and Jesus -- and what they've done for the human race. Sometimes Chagnon, while recognizing how nasty life has been for the Yanomamo, seems to acquiesce in the nastiness, to display a kind of "zookeeper" mentality towards primitive tribes. He seems a bit conflicted over the issue.My own feeling is that these two tribes of nabas, anthros and missionaries, can learn a lot from one another. Understanding a people should not, after all, conflict with helping them. Maybe the naba tribes should get together and have a feast.
L**N
Thorough and insightful.
Read this for my anthropogy class. It is about the Yamamo, tribes that live in between Venusela and Brazil, detailing their history, customs, beliefs, and current situation. Though they are diffrent from us, there are times when they are more human, and this book especially laments how their culture is being eroded by outsiders. The book is analytical, comedic, tragic, and thoughtful; all about things that happened!
D**N
I took a College Anthropology Course and this was one ...
I took a College Anthropology Course and this was one of the text books. I wanted to reread it and found I had misplaced it over many moves over the years, Thanks for the replacement, Dan Thompson
J**C
Interesting Book
I needed this book for college, and unlike most books, I actually read this one. It's an interesting read and well put together.
U**E
Four Stars
Great book for class. Condition was pretty good
C**S
Boring
I gave it 5 stars because it's not their fault this is a boring book but it is. If you need it for class, this is the right one and it's legit. Get it and get a good grade in your class.A++ WOULD BUY AGAIN IF I HAD TO BECAUSE OF A CLASS, NOT BECAUSE I WANT TO READ IT.
B**S
Four Stars
Book needed for college course.
R**L
Pleased
Interesting book about anthropological research.
A**R
One of the best books in the history of anthropological research and ethnographic studies
One of the best books in the history of anthropological research and ethnographic studies.It's certainly a really compelling and interesting read, even fun at times, because it's not a textbook on the Yanomami tribe, being instead an autobiographical account of the challenging of a western scholar trying to study a different culture and living among them
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