Darkness in El Dorado Controversy - Archived Document


Internet Source: Seattle Times, February 17, 2013
Source URL (Archive.org): http://seattletimes.com/html/books/2020352117_booknoblesavagesxml.html?prmid=head_more

‘Noble Savages’: Fierce Tribes and Occupational Hazards

By Curt Schleier

In “Noble Savages,” anthropologist Napoleon Chagnon writes about his work with the Yanomamo people of backcountry Venezuela and his feud with many anthropologists over his findings and methods.

“Noble Savages: My Life Among Two Dangerous Tribes — the Yanomamo and The Anthropologists”
by Napoleon Chagnon
Simon & Schuster, 544 pp., $32.50

Napoleon Chagnon is the most polarizing anthropologist in the field. He made numerous trips over three decades into the backwaters of Venezuela to study Stone Age people called the Yanomamo. He wrote what became the most well-read book in the field, “Yanomamo: The Fierce People.”

And then the attacks came. Not just attacks, but the academic equivalent of a WWE cage match. He was accused of causing a measles epidemic. He was accused of racism.

His latest book, “Noble Savages: My Life Among Two Dangerous Tribes — the Yanomamo and the Anthropologists” — reads a little like a valedictory. It covers a description of the Yanomamo and their habits written in relatively plain English without much Academic Speak. It comes replete with amusing anecdotes of some of the hazards of fieldwork, including a fungus infection he caught wearing a borrowed loin cloth.

But the heart of the book is a defense of his work, which has been attacked by many of his peers.

His findings almost from the get-go ran contrary to the conventional wisdom. He found warfare was common and not — as cultural anthropologists thought — caused by “shortages of scarce strategic material resources.” Instead, he says they were often started over women.

That “opened the possibility that human warfare had as much to do with the evolved nature of man” — i.e., that it was biologically rooted — “as it did with what (was) learned and acquired from one’s culture.”

Moreover, over the course of the years he made enemies of the Salesian missionaries, who dominated the area, accusing them of giving goods — machetes, axes, steel tools — to Yanomamo parents in what “effectively amounted to purchasing the children and taking them away.”

His work was condemned by the American Anthropological Association (AAA), and a damning book and film accused Chagnon and the geneticist he partnered with of abetting and even causing a 1968 measles epidemic.

The AAA condemnation was overturned by a subsequent membership vote, the measles accusation investigated and dismissed; yet he remains a controversial figure.

It’s hard to understand the level of vitriol. Academia is supposedly the one place where professors are free to talk unhindered by the conventions of politics.

How does this impact the casual reader? Not at all. Whether the Yanomamo are really fierce people and whether their nature is a function of biology or culture is for the professors to work out.

But Chagnon’s description of the life of the Yanomamo is consistent with others I’ve read and makes for fascinating reading for anyone interested in native peoples, history and where we all came from.

His descriptions of the hardship of fieldwork — the anaconda that almost took his head off, the termites he finds in his shoes in the morning and the pleasures of smoked armadillo — are equally so.

But it is the back and forth between Chagnon and his peers that makes the most intense reading. At one AAA session, Margaret Mead, who was not a fan, described efforts to scrub a planned Chagnon presentation as the equivalent of “book burning.”