Vol. 153 (2023): Archivio per l'Antropologia e la Etnologia
Research Papers

Early contacts with Yanomami: an ignored and little appreciated history of ethnographic reports

Francesca Bigoni
Museo di Storia Naturale dell'Università degli Studi di Firenze - Sede di Antropologia e Etnologia
Corrado Dalmonego
Programa de Pós Graduação em Ciências Sociais, Universidade Federal de São Paulo
The cover of the CLIII_2023 volume

Published 2023-11-01

Keywords

  • anthropology,
  • ethnology,
  • Chagnon,
  • missionaries,
  • amazon rainforest

How to Cite

Bigoni, F., & Dalmonego, C. (2023). Early contacts with Yanomami: an ignored and little appreciated history of ethnographic reports. Archivio Per l’Antropologia E La Etnologia, 153, 3–19. https://doi.org/10.36253/aae-2339

Abstract

In 1968, Napoleon Chagnon published his influential book Yanomamö: The Fierce People. Later, this book and Chagnon’s other publications were widely criticized. However, even his critics frequently describe Chagnon’s research as the first serious anthropological study of these Amazon rainforest people. This categorization, even if it is almost universally repeated up until this day, is far from reality. A vast and highly significant amount of information was already gathered and published on Yanomami before Chagnon even thought about starting his field research. Yet, these publications remain largely unknown, ignored, dismissed or underappreciated, perhaps partly because most were not in English. Here we review articles, scientific papers and books published before 1968, a literature essential for understanding the torturous path of anthropological studies portraying the Yanomami and reassessing Chagnon's place in the history of Anthropology.