Excerpt
Noble Savages andlt;link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../styles/9781451611472.css"andgt; andlt;h2 andgt;andlt;a id="ch01"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;andlt;a id="page_15"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;1andlt;/h2andgt; andlt;h2 andgt;Culture Shockandlt;/h2andgt; andlt;h2 andgt;My First Year in the Fieldandlt;/h2andgt; andlt;h3 andgt;The First Dayandlt;/h3andgt; andlt;BRandgt;My first day in the fieldand#8212;November 28, 1964and#8212;was an experience Iand#8217;ll never forget. I had never seen so much green snot before then. Not many anthropologists spend their first day this way. If they did, there would be very few applicants to graduate programs in anthropology.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I had traveled in a small aluminum rowboat propelled by a large outboard motor for two and a half days, cramped in with several extra fifty-five-gallon gasoline barrels and two Venezuelan functionaries who worked for the Malarialogand#237;a, the Venezuelan malaria control service. They were headed to their tiny outpost in Yanomamand#246; territoryand#8212;two or three thatched huts. This boat trip took me from the territorial capital, Puerto Ayacucho, a small town on the Orinoco River, into Yanomamand#246; country on the High Orinoco some 350 miles upstream. I was making a quick trip to have a look-see before I brought my main supplies and equipment for a seventeen-month study of the Yanomamand#246; Indians, a Venezuelan tribe that was very poorly known in 1964. Most of their villages had no contact with the outside world and were considered to be andlt;a id="page_16"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;and#8220;wildand#8221; Indians. I also wanted to see how things at the field site would be for my wife, Carlene, and two young children, Darius (three years old) and Lisa (eighteen months old).andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;On the morning of the third day we reached a small mission settlement called Tama Tama, the field and#8220;headquartersand#8221; of a group of mostly American andlt;a id="wl8"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;evangelical missionaries, the New Tribes Mission, who were working in two Yanomamand#246; villages farther upstream and in several villages of the Carib-speaking Yeand#8217;kwana, a different tribe located northwest of the Yanomamand#246;. The missionaries had come out of these remote Indian villages to hold a conference on the progress of their mission work and were conducting their meetings at Tama Tama when I arrived. Tama Tama was about a half day by motorized dugout canoe downstream from where the Yanomamand#246; territory began.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;We picked up a passenger at Tama Tama, James P. Barker, the first outsider to make a sustained, permanent contact with the andlt;a id="wl9"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;Venezuelan Yanomamand#246; in 1950. He had just returned from a yearand#8217;s furlough in the United States, where I had briefly visited him in Chicago before we both left for Venezuela. As luck would have it, we both arrived in Venezuela at about the same time, and in Yanomamand#246; territory the same week. He was a bit surprised to see me and happily agreed to accompany me to the village I had selected (with his advice) for my base of operations, Bisaasi-teri, and to introduce me to the Indians. I later learned that bisaasi was the name of the palm whose leaves were used in the large roofs of many Yanomamand#246; villages: -teri is the Yanomamand#246; word that means and#8220;village.and#8221; Bisaasi-teri was also his own home base, but he had not been there for over a year and did not plan to come back permanently for another three months. He therefore welcomed this unexpected opportunity to make a quick overnight visit before he returned permanently.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Barker had been living with this particular Yanomamand#246; group about four years at that time. Bisaasi-teri had divided into two villages when the village moved to the mouth of the Mavaca River, where it flows into the Orinoco from the south. One group was downstream and was called Lower Bisaasi-teri (koro-teri) and the other was upstream and called Upper Bisaasi-teri (ora-teri). Barker lived among the Upper Bisaasi-teri. His mud-and-thatch house was located next to their village.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andlt;a id="page_17"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;andlt;img src="../images/f0017-01.jpg" width="550" height="365" alt="photograph"andgt;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Left to right: James V. Neel, Napoleon Chagnon, and James P. Barker, 1966andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;We arrived at Upper Bisaasi-teri about 2 P.M. and docked the aluminum speedboat along the muddy riverbank at the terminus of the path used by the Indians to fetch their drinking water. The Yanomamand#246; normally avoid large rivers like the Orinoco, but they moved there because Barker had persuaded them to. The settlement was called, in Spanish, by the men of the Malarialogand#237;a and the missionaries, Boca Mavacaand#8212;the Mouth of the Mavaca. It sometimes appeared on Venezuelan maps of that era as Yababujiand#8212;a Yanomamand#246; word that translates as and#8220;Gimme!and#8221; This name was apparentlyand#8212;and puckishlyand#8212;suggested to the mapmakers because it captured some essence of the place: and#8220;Gimmeand#8221; was the most frequent phrase used by the Yanomamand#246; when they greeted visitors to the area.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;My ears were ringing from three dawn-to-dusk days of the constant drone of the outboard motor. It was hot and muggy, and my clothing was soaked with perspiration, as it would be for the next seventeen months. Small biting gnats, bareto in the Yanomamand#246; language, were out in astronomical numbers, for November was the beginning of the dry season and the dry season means andlt;a id="wl10"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;lots of bareto. Clouds of them were so dense andlt;a id="page_18"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;in some places that you had to be careful when you breathed lest you inhale some of them. My face and hands were swollen from their numerous stings.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;In just a few moments I was to meet my first Yanomamand#246;, my first and#8220;primitiveand#8221; man. What would he be like? I had visions of proudly entering the village and seeing 125 and#8220;social factsand#8221; running about, altruistically calling each other kinship terms and sharing food, each courteously waiting to have me interview them and, perhaps, collect his genealogy.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Would they like me? This was extremely important to me. I wanted them to be so fond of me that they would adopt me into their kinship system and way of life. During my anthropological training at the University of Michigan I learned that successful anthropologists always get adopted by their people. It was something very special. I had also learned during my seven years of anthropological training that the and#8220;kinship systemand#8221; was equivalent to and#8220;the whole societyand#8221; in primitive tribes and that it was a moral way of life. I was determined to earn my way into their moral system of kinship and become a member of their societyand#8212;to be accepted by them and adopted as one of them.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The year of fieldwork ahead of me was what earned you your badge of authority as an anthropologist, a testimony to your otherworldly experience, your academic passport, your professional credentials. I was now standing at the very cusp of that profound, solemn transformation and I truly savored this moment.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;My heart began to pound as we approached the village and heard the buzz of activity within the circular compound. Barker commented that he was anxious to see if any changes had taken place while he was away, especially how many Yanomamand#246; died during his absence. I found this somewhat macabre, but I later came to understand why this was an important concern: among the Yanomamand#246; it is offensiveand#8212;and sometimes dangerousand#8212;to say the name of a dead person in the presence of his close relatives, so it is important to know beforehand, if possible, who is no longer living to avoid asking about them.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I nervously felt my back pocket to make sure that my nearly blank field notebook was still there, and I felt more secure when I touched it.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The village looked like some large, nearly vertical wall of leaves from the outside. The Yanomamand#246; call it a shabono. The several entrances were andlt;a id="page_19"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;covered over with brush and dry palm leaves. Barker and I entered the opening that led to the river. I pushed the brush aside to expose the low opening into the village.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The excitement of meeting my first Yanomamand#246; was almost unbearable as I crouched and duck-waddled through the low passage into the open, wide village plaza. I looked up and gasped in shock when I saw a dozen burly, naked, sweaty, hideous men nervously staring at us down the shafts of their drawn arrows! Immense wads of green tobacco were stuck between their lower teeth and lips, making them look even more hideous. Strands of dark green snot dripped or hung from their nostrilsand#8212;strands so long that they drizzled from their chins down to their pectoral muscles and oozed lazily across their bellies, blending into their red paint and sweat.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andlt;img src="../images/f0019-01.jpg" width="550" height="393" alt="photograph"andgt;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Green nasal mucus laden with hallucinogenic hisiomand#246; snuff powderandlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;We had arrived at the village while the men were blowing a greenish powder, a hallucinogenic drug called ebene, up each otherand#8217;s noses through yard-long hollow tubes. The Yanomamand#246; blow it with such force that gobs of it spurt out of the opposite nostril of the person inhaling. One of the side effects of the hallucinogen is a profusely runny nose, hacking and choking, and sometimes vomiting. The nasal mucus is always saturated with the green powder, and the men usually let it run freely from their nostrils.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;a id="page_20"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;My next discovery was that there were a dozen or so vicious, underfed growling dogs snapping at my legs, circling me as if I were to be their next meal. I stood there holding my notebook, helpless and pathetic. Then the stench of the decaying vegetation, dog feces, and garbage hit me and I almost got sick.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I was shocked and horrified. What kind of welcome was this for the person who came here to live with you and learn your way of life, to become friends with you, to be adopted by you? The Yanomamand#246; put their weapons down when they recognized and welcomed Barker and returned to their chanting, keeping a nervous eye on the village entrances.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;We had arrived just after a serious fight. Seven of the women from this shabono had been abducted the day before by a neighboring group, and the local men and their guests had just that morning recovered five of them in a brutal club fight that nearly ended in a shooting war with arrows. The neighboring abductors, now angry because they had just lost five of their seven new female captives, had threatened to raid the Bisaasi-teri and kill them with arrows. When Barker and I arrived and entered the village unexpectedly, they suspected or assumed that we were the raiders.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;On several occasions during the next two hours the men jumped to their feet, armed themselves, nocked their arrows, ran to the several entrances, and waited nervously for the noise outside the village to be identified. My enthusiasm for collecting ethnographic facts and esoteric kinship data diminished in proportion to the number of times such an alarm was raised. In fact, I was relieved when Barker suggested that we sleep across the river for the evening, adding and#8220;because it would be safer over there.and#8221; I disconsolately mumbled to myself, and#8220;Christ! What have I gotten myself into here?and#8221;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;As we walked down the path to the boat, I pondered the wisdom of having decided to spend a year and a half with these people before I had even seen what they were like. I am not ashamed to admit that had there been a diplomatic way out, I would have ended my fieldwork then andlt;a id="page_21"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;and there. I did not look forward to the next dayand#8212;and monthsand#8212;when I would be alone with these people. I did not speak a word of their language, and they spoke only their own language. Only a few of the young men knew a handful of words in Spanishand#8212;not enough to utter even a short comprehensible sentence.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The Yanomamand#246; were decidedly different from what I had imagined them to be in my Rousseauian daydreams. The whole situation was depressing, and I wondered why, after entering college, I had ever decided to switch my major to anthropology from physics and engineering in the first place. I had not eaten all day, I was soaking wet from perspiration, the bareto were biting me, and I was covered with snot-laden red pigment, the result of a dozen or so complete examinations I had been given by as many very pushy, sweaty Yanomamand#246; men.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;These examinations capped an otherwise grim and discouraging day. The naked men would blow their noses into their hands, flick as much of the green mucus off as they could in a snap of the wrist, wipe the residue into their hair, and then carefully examine my face, beard, arms, legs, hair, and the contents of my pockets. I asked Barker how to say, and#8220;Donand#8217;t do that. Your hands are dirty.and#8221; My admonitions were met by the grinning Yanomamand#246; in the following way: They would and#8220;washand#8221; their hands by spitting a quantity of slimy tobacco juice into them, rub them together, wipe them into their hair, grin, and then proceed with the examination with and#8220;cleanand#8221; hands.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Barker and I crossed the river, carried our packs up the bank, and slung our hammocks in one of the thatched huts belonging to a Malarialogand#237;a employee. When Barker pulled his hammock out of a rubber bag, a heavy, damp, disagreeable odor of mildewed cotton and stale wood smoke wafted out with it. Even the missionaries are filthy, I thought to myself. But within two weeks, everything I owned smelled the same way, and I lived with that odor for the remainder of my fieldwork. My several field hammocks still smell faintly like thatand#8212;many years after my last trip to the Yanomamand#246; and after many times through a washing machine.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;After I had adjusted to the circumstances, my own habits of personal cleanliness declined to such levels that I didnand#8217;t protest anymore while being examined by the Yanomamand#246;, as I was not much cleaner than they andlt;a id="page_22"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;were. I also realized that it is exceptionally difficult to blow your nose gracefully when you are stark naked and the invention of tissues and handkerchiefs is still millennia away.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I was now facing the disappointing consequences of what, at the time, was a logical conclusion to a sequence of decisions I had made in college. When I had decided to study anthropology, I had to pick a specialization within it. I chose cultural anthropology. The next choice was to pick some kind of societyand#8212;tribesmen, peasants, or industrialized existing cultures. I picked unknown tribesmen, which limited the parts of the world I could study: there are no unknown tribesmen, for example, in the United States, so I would have to consider more remote places. One of the possible places was South America, and there most of the unknown tribesmen were in the Amazon Basin.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;So, here I was, my blank notebook in hand, preparing to dig in for seventeen more months of fieldwork. I was the proverbial blank slate incarnate.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;h3 andgt;My Life in the Jungleandlt;/h3andgt; andlt;BRandgt;It isnand#8217;t easy to plop down in the Amazon Basin for seventeen months and get immediately into the anthropological swing of things. You have been told or read about quicksand, horrible diseases, snakes, jaguars, vampire bats, electric eels, little spiny fish that will swim into your penis, and getting lost. Most of the dangersand#8212;diseases, snakes, jaguars, spiny fish, eels, getting lostand#8212;are indeed real, but your imagination makes them more ominous and threatening than many of them really are.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Most normal people have no idea how many of the simple things in life just do not exist in the fieldand#8212;something as simple as a flat surface to write on or put your coffee cup on. What my anthropology professors never bothered to tell me about was the mundane, unexciting, and trivial stuffand#8212;like eating, defecating, sleeping, or keeping clean. This, I began to suspect, was because very few of my professors had done fieldwork in uncomfortable circumstances remotely similar to what I now faced. These circumstances turned out to be the bane of my existence during the first several months of field research. After that they became merely the unavoidable, inconvenient, but routine conditions of the life of a andlt;a id="page_23"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;fieldworking anthropologist who unwittingly and somewhat naively decided to study the most remote, primitive tribe he could find.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I initially set up my household in Barkerand#8217;s vacant mud-and-thatch house, some thirty yards from Bisaasi-teri, and immediately set to work building my own mud-walled, thatched-roof hut with the help of the Yanomamand#246;. Meanwhile, I had to eat and try to do my field research.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I soon discovered that it was an enormously time-consuming task to maintain my hygiene in the manner to which I had grown accustomed in the relatively antiseptic environment of the northern United States. Either I could be relatively well fed and relatively comfortable in a fresh change of clothesand#8212;and do very little fieldworkand#8212;or I could do considerably more fieldwork and be less well fed and less comfortable.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I quickly learned how complicated it can be to make a simple bowl of oatmeal in the jungle. First, I had to make two trips to the river to haul my water for the day. Next, I had to prime my kerosene stove with alcohol to get it burning, a tricky procedure when you are trying to mix powdered milk and fill a coffeepot with water at the same time. My alcohol prime always burned out before I could turn on the kerosene, and I would have to start all over. Or I would turn on the kerosene, optimistically hoping that the stove element was still hot enough to vaporize the fuel, and start a small fire in my palm-thatched hut as the liquid kerosene squirted all over my makeshift table and mud walls and then ignited. Many amused Yanomamand#246; onlookers quickly learned the English expletive Oh shit! They actually got very good at predicting when I would say this: if something went wrong and I had a clumsy accident, they would shout in unison: and#8220;Say and#8216;Oh shit!and#8217;and#160;and#8221; (Oh Shit a da kuu!) Later, and once they discovered that the phrase irritated the New Tribes missionaries, the Yanomamand#246; used it as often as they could in the missionariesand#8217; presence, or, worse yet, mischievously instructed the missionaries to say and#8220;Oh shit!and#8221; whenever they also had a mishap.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I usually had to start over with the alcohol prime. Then I had to boil the oatmeal and pick the bugs out of it. All my supplies were carefully stored in rat-proof, moisture-proof, and insect-proof containers, not one of which ever served its purpose adequately. Just taking things out of the multiplicity of containers and repacking them afterward was a minor project in itself. By the time I had hauled the water to cook with, unpacked andlt;a id="page_24"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;my food, prepared the oatmeal, powdered milk, and coffee, heated water for dishes, washed and dried the dishes, repacked the food in the containers, stored the containers in locked trunks, and cleaned up my mess, the ceremony of preparing breakfast had brought me almost up to lunchtime!andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andlt;img src="../images/f0024-01.jpg" width="550" height="367" alt="photograph"andgt;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Medium-size village on the banks of the Siapa Riverandlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;I soon decided that eating three meals a day was simply out of the question. I solved the problem by eating a single meal that could be prepared in a single container, or, at most, in two containers; washed my few dishes only when there were no clean ones left, using cold river water; and wore each change of clothing at least a week to cut down on my laundry, a courageous undertaking in the tropics. I reeked like a smoked jockstrap left to mildew in the bottom of a dark gym locker. I also became less concerned about sharing my provisions with the rats, insects, Yanomamand#246;, and the elements, thereby reducing the complexity of my storage system. I was able to last most of the day on cafand#233; con lecheand#8212;heavily sugared espresso coffee diluted about five to one with hot milk reconstituted from powder. I would prepare this beverage in the evening and store it in a large thermos. Frequently, my single meal was no more complicated than a can of sardines and a package of salted crackers with peanut butter. andlt;a id="page_25"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;But at least two or three times a week I would do something and#8220;specialand#8221; and sophisticated, like make a batch of oatmeal or boil rice and add a can of tuna fish and tomato paste to it. I also ate a lot of food that I obtained from the Yanomamand#246;and#8212;especially bananas, plantains, and potato-like tubersand#8212;by trading fishhooks and nylon fishing line.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andlt;img src="../images/f0025-01.jpg" width="550" height="369" alt="photograph"andgt;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;A small village in a remote areaandlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;As to recurrent personal needs let me just say that the Yanomamand#246; have not yet worked out a suitable sewage system. Barker mentioned to me on the first day that people just go off a ways into the jungle to do number two, and to watch where I stepped. and#8220;If you run into some of it youand#8217;ll probably run into a lot of it,and#8221; he added. The environs immediately surrounding a Yanomamand#246; village of two hundred people are a hazardous place to take an idle stroll. Weand#8217;ve all been on camping trips, but imagine the hygienic consequences of camping for about three years in the same small place with two hundred companions without sewers, running water, or garbage collection, and you get a sense of what daily life is like among the Yanomamand#246;. And what it was like for much of human history, for that matter.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I barely recall these things now. They come to mind only when I read over old notes taken in the early days of my fieldwork, or the early letters andlt;a id="page_26"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;I wrote to my wife from the field. They also come to mind when I take out one of my old, smoky field hammocks to string between two trees in my yard.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;h3 andgt;Beginning to Doubt Some Anthropological Truthsandlt;/h3andgt; andlt;BRandgt;There were two things I learned that first day that would dominate much of my field research life for the next thirty-five years.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The first discovery was that and#8220;native warfareand#8221; was not simply some neutral item on an anthropological trait list, equivalent to other traits like and#8220;they make baskets with vinesand#8221; or and#8220;the kinship system is the bifurcate-merging type.and#8221; Among the Yanomamand#246; native warfare was not just occasional or sporadic but was a chronic threat, lurking and threatening to disrupt communities at any moment. The larger the community of people, the more one could sense its andlt;a id="wl11"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;foreboding presence.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Warfare and the threat of warfare permeated almost all aspects of Yanomamand#246; social life: politics, visits between villages, tensions among people, feasts, trading, daily routines, village size, and even where new villages were established when larger communities subdivided, a process I called village fissioning. This martial condition is not often discussed in the anthropological literature because there were few places in the world where populations of tribesmen were still growing by reproducing offspring faster than people were dying and were fighting with each other in complete independence of nation states that surrounded them. Yanomamand#246; history is a history of wars, as Karl Marx claimed of the history of all peoples.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The second discovery I made that first day was that most Yanomamand#246; arguments and fights started over women. This straightforward ethnographic observation would cause me a great deal of academic grief because in the 1960s and#8220;fighting over womenand#8221; was considered a controversial explanation in and#8220;scientificand#8221; anthropology. The most scientific anthropological theory of primitive war of the 1960s held that tribesmen, just like members of industrialized nations, fought only over scarce material resourcesand#8212;food, oil, land, water supplies, seaports, wealth, etc. For an anthropologist to suggest that fighting had something to do with women, that is, with sex and reproductive competition, was tantamount to blasphemy, or at best ludicrous. Biologists, on the other hand, found this andlt;a id="page_27"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;observation not only unsurprising, but normal for a sexually reproducing species. What they did find surprising was that anthropologists regarded fighting over reproductive competition as ludicrous when applied to humans. Competition among males vying for females was, after all, widespread in the animal world.andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;andlt;img src="../images/f0027-01.jpg" width="273" height="400" alt="photograph"andgt;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Young, beautiful moko dude (post-pubescent girl)andlt;BRandgt;andlt;BRandgt;I was stunned by the reaction to this finding by some of the most famous anthropologists of the day. There was immediate and serious professional opposition to my rather innocent description of the facts when I published them in 1966 andlt;a id="wl12"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;in my doctoral thesis. I was still wet behind my ears in an academic sense, and found myself, at the ripe age of twenty-eight, already controversial for saying that the Yanomamand#246;, a large, multivillage Amazonian tribe, fought a great deal over women and marital infidelity.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Thatand#8217;s when I started to become skeptical about what senior members of my profession said about the primitive world. I began suspecting that andlt;a id="page_28"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;senior anthropologists believed that it was their solemn responsibility to and#8220;interpretand#8221; for the rest of the world what they regarded as the recondite meanings of the customs of other cultures.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;In other words, what I didnand#8217;t know then was that if some serious, well-trained anthropologist who spent more than a year living in the midst of a warring tribe reported that much of the fighting he witnessed was and#8220;over women,and#8221; that is, was rooted in reproductive competition, then such an informed conclusion opened the possibility that human warfare had as much to do with the evolved nature of man as it did with what one learned and acquired from oneand#8217;s culture. Most anthropologists, by contrast, believed that warfare and fighting was entirely determined by culture. My fieldwork raised the anthropologically disagreeable possibility that human nature was also driven by an evolved human biology. This idea was extremely controversial in the 1960s and angered many cultural anthropologists.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Thus, my very first published statements and descriptions of Yanomamand#246; violence would constitute an allegedly dangerous challenge to the received wisdom of many senior cultural anthropologists. More immediately worrisome for me was that some of the most prominent of these anthropologists were my own teachers at the University of Michigan and several of them would serve on my doctoral committee.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;h3 andgt;The Intellectual and Political Climate of the 1960sandlt;/h3andgt; andlt;BRandgt;It is a truly curious and remarkable characteristic of cultural anthropology, as distinct from other subfields of anthropology, that any time native people are said to do something risky for reasons other than and#8220;maximizing access to material resources,and#8221; leading figures in the profession grow uneasy and suspicious. One well-known cultural anthropologistand#8212;an andlt;a id="wl13"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;Englishman named Ashley Montaguand#8212;wrote angry book-length rebuttals whenever someone prominent made such a claim. He seemed convinced that people might get the wrong impression that biological factors help explain what humans do, or, worse yet, that humans might have something called and#8220;human natureand#8221; as distinct from a purely cultural nature or, more precisely, that their behavioral characteristics might have evolved by some natural process, such as what Darwin called and#8220;natural selection.and#8221;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;a id="page_29"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;My career began with the uneasy feeling that cultural anthropology was one of the last bastions of opposition to Darwinand#8217;s theory of evolution by natural selection. The University of Michiganand#8217;s anthropology department was, however, the major center of the Theory of Cultural Evolution, whose proponents distinguished it sharply from biological evolution or organic evolution, that is, the andlt;a id="wl14"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;evolution of biological organisms.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The standard, almost solemn, epistemological position in cultural anthropology when I was in graduate school was that humans have only a cultural nature. Thus, our physical or biological characteristics as an evolved primate are irrelevant to whatever we do as members of society. The biological properties of humans, as my professors taught me, have to be factored out of any anthropological explanation of what we do.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Among my professors were Leslie A. White, Elman R. Service, Marshall D. Sahlins, Eric R. Wolf, and Morton H. Fried, who were among the most prominent cultural anthropologists of the day and important architects of the anthropological view I have just described.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Anthropology by definition is the science of man. Isnand#8217;t it strange that this science factors out its central subjectand#8217;s biology in pursuit of understanding its subject?andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;This rather odd but axiomatic view has deepand#8212;and widespreadand#8212;roots in several of the social sciences, sociology and anthropology in particular. Briefly put, the distinguished nineteenth-century French sociologist Emile Durkheim struggled to establish a and#8220;science of societyand#8221; (what today we call sociology) at a time when it was intricately bound up and intertwined with psychology and social psychology. He felt that there were irreducible facts that were purely and exclusively social in nature and could be studied in their own right, divorced from any psychological and/or biological attributes of the human organisms whose activities were the subject of study. The study of these facts, he argued, deserved to have its own science.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;A similar rebellion occurred in cultural anthropology, beginning with the efforts of Herbert Spencer and perhaps culminating in the works of Leslie A. White, one of my major professors, and, later, Marvin Harris, who would become one of my most outspoken critics. White and Harris spent their lifetimes trying to create a and#8220;science of cultureand#8221; (and#8220;Culturologyand#8221; as Leslie White called it: the study of cultural facts). And, like Durkheim andlt;a id="page_30"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;before them, they insisted that the biological aspects of human beings were not relevant to and#8220;the culture process.and#8221;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;My observation that Yanomamand#246; men fought mostly over women, and, equally important, that these conflicts and their outcomes had important consequences for understanding Yanomamand#246; culture and society, disturbed some of my fellow cultural anthropologists. Why? As I look back on the history of my research, I was saying not just one, but two things that deeply concerned these anthropologists and that were considered to be controversial at the time.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The first was that warfare was common among the Yanomamand#246; and that it was apparently not caused by capitalist exploitation, nor was it a reaction to oppression by Western colonial powers. This raised the possibility that warfare was, in a sense, a and#8220;naturaland#8221; or and#8220;predictableand#8221; condition among tribesmen who had not been exposed to or corrupted by capitalistic, industrialized, and/or colonial cultures.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The second possibility my research raised was that lethal conflicts between groups might not be explicable by citing and#8220;shortages of scarce strategic material resources,and#8221; considered by anthropologists and other social scientists to be the only legitimate and#8220;scientificand#8221; reason for human conflict and warfare.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;On my return to Ann Arbor in 1966 from my first field trip, a University of Michigan professor, Norma Diamond, invited me to give a lecture in her large introductory class. I spoke about my field research and how important warfare was in Yanomamand#246; culture. The students were fascinated. After my lecture Diamond thanked me for my presentation in front of her class. But, as we walked back to the Anthropology Department, she cautioned me: and#8220;You shouldnand#8217;t say things like that. People will get the wrong impression.and#8221; When I asked her what she meant, she added: and#8220;About warfare. We shouldnand#8217;t say that native people have warfare and kill each other. People will get the wrong impression.and#8221;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;When I reported in one of my first articles that the Yanomamand#246; fought a great deal over women, one prominent anthropologist, David Schneider, then at the University of Chicago, wrote a sarcastic letter to me that said something to the effect, Fighting over women? Gold and diamonds I can understand. But women? Never! And, as a last-minute addendum to a major book he was about to publish on the history of andlt;a id="page_31"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;anthropological theory, prominent anthropologist Marvin Harris described my 1966 doctoral dissertation as giving credence to and#8220;the more lurid speculationsand#8221; of John McLennan, a nineteenth-century Scottish anthropologist and jurist who wrote a book about primitive marriage and viewed and#8220;marriage by captureand#8221; as andlt;a id="wl15"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;a and#8220;primitive stageand#8221; in human social history. I would ultimately debate this issue with Harris from 1968 until his death in 2001. Several of his disciples try to carry on this debateand#8212;or some version of itand#8212;today. Harris defended a Marxist and#8220;cultural materialist deterministicand#8221; anthropological view, while I was among a small minority of anthropologists struggling to develop a more Darwinian, more evolutionary view of human behavior. I saw no difficulty in incorporating both views into a comprehensive theory of human behavior, but Harris (and many other anthropologists) adamantly insisted that a scientific theory of human behavior had no room for ideas from biology, reproductive competition, and evolutionary theory. Many of these anthropologists argued that cultures and societies were not merely analogous to living, sexually reproducing organisms, but were homologous with them and therefore interchangeable in Darwinand#8217;s theory of evolution by natural selection. Biologists found this argument implausible and unpersuasive. One of the participants in this long debate who held to the biological point of view asked his opponent in exasperation: and#8220;Does your piano menstruate?and#8221;andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Ironically, Harris and I both argued for a scientific view of human behavior at a time when increasing numbers of anthropologists were becoming skeptical of the scientific approach and were even antiscientific. However, Harris was adamantly opposed to a Darwinian perspective on human behaviorand#8212;which I thought was itself an antiscientific view.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;During the weeks, months, and years I spent among the Yanomamand#246; I began to explore and document their lives in statistical and demographic waysand#8212;and my doubts about much of what I had learned about anthropology from my professors only grew.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;One lesson that I eventually learned from the history of my own anthropological research and the controversies it caused was that cultural anthropology did not fit a traditional scientific definition where facts are established by observations that are verified by others to establish patterns and, if empirical observations by others do not verify the original andlt;a id="page_32"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;observations, then efforts must be made to account for the differences in the observations. Instead, anthropology is more like a religion. Indeed, the organizational and intellectual structure of a large fraction of cultural anthropology is best understood if viewed as an academic fraternity that intimidates and suppresses dissent, usually by declaring that the dissenter is guilty of conduct that is unethical, immoraland#8212;or Darwinian.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Many cultural anthropologists today are afraid to make even timid challenges to this authority and are very careful to describe their findings in cautiously chosen words that are frequently vague so as not to give people and#8220;the wrong impressionand#8221; or, more important, not to invite the suspicion or condemnation of the ayatollahs of anthropology, the Thought Police who guard the received wisdoms.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;h3 andgt;How I Chose to Study the Yanomamand#246;andlt;/h3andgt; andlt;BRandgt;The Yanomamand#246; were not my initial choice for fieldwork. I wanted to study a newly contacted tribe in the central Brazilian highlands, a group called the Suyand#225;, one of several tribes whose members spoke a native language belonging to the Gand#234; language family. I did the necessary library research to write a grant proposal and focused on several of the then-timely theoretical problems in anthropology. I applied for and was awarded a National Institute of Mental Health research grant on the basis of this proposal, a small grant that would cover my travel and andlt;a id="wl16"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;living expenses for one year.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Unfortunately, a few weeks after I learned that my NIMH grant was awarded, the Brazilian military overthrew the democratically elected government. From talking with experienced field researchers who had worked in the Amazon area I learned that it was a bad idea to try to get anything done in a country that had just undergone a military coup. Furthermore, it might even be dangerous to try to get into some areas of the country.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I decided to pick a different tribe in a different country, ideally a tribe that straddled the border between two countries. I figured that if one of the countries had a revolution, I might be able to get into the same tribe from the other country and continue my fieldwork there. Hence, the Yanomamand#246;, who live in Venezuela and Brazil.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;h3 andgt;andlt;a id="page_33"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;Human Geneticsandlt;/h3andgt; andlt;BRandgt;About the time I was doing the library research for my NIMH proposal on the Suyand#225; tribe, I made an appointment to meet with Dr. James V. Neel, head of the University of Michigan Medical Schooland#8217;s Department of Human Genetics. Neel was the founder and the chairman of that department and an internationally prominent figure in human genetics. He and several of his colleagues, Dr. William J. Schull in particular, had studied the long-term genetic effects on andlt;a id="wl17"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Also, Neel had collaborated in the field with Dr. Frank Livingston, who was now on the faculty in the Anthropology Department and one of my teachers. Their study focused on several native African tribes and the phenomenon of sickle-cell anemia.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I was more intrigued by some of Neeland#8217;s recent andlt;a id="wl18"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;research among the Xavante (Shavante) Indians in collaboration with anthropologists, in particular, David Maybury-Lewis. The Xavante were a Brazilian tribe in the Gand#234;-speaking language group located close to the area where I intended to study the Suyand#225; tribe. I was interested in learning whether Neel would consider a similar collaboration with me after I had lived with the Suyand#225; for a year or so. Many of my own anthropological interests were compatible with and even overlapped extensively with hisand#8212;genealogies, marriage patterns, demographic patterns, and the social organization of reproduction. His interest in these topics was medical, while mine was anthropological and behavioral. For example, Neel wanted to know the amount of genetic variation that existed between tribes and, more important, between communities of the same tribe, a scientific question that was just starting to be explored in the mid-1960s as human geneticists and anthropologists began to document in a more sophisticated and comprehensive way the extent of human variability by using newly discovered genetic markers in, especially, easily collected blood samples.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;I had taken human genetics courses in the Anthropology Department andlt;a id="wl19"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;from James Spuhler, whose graduate course included some of Neeland#8217;s own graduate students and, to my surprise, even a few faculty andlt;a id="wl20"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;members in Neeland#8217;s department.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;After an initial and fruitful discussion, I agreed to collaborate with Neel in a short-term biomedical/anthropological research study after I andlt;a id="page_34"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;had spent a year among the Suyand#225; and learned their language and the intricacies of their social organization.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;However, Neel was also in the process of developing a collaborative relationship with Venezuelan colleagues who were doing similar research among several native tribes in that country, Dr. Miguel Layrisse in particular. Layrisse was internationally known for his serological studies among Venezuelan Indians, much of it done in collaboration with the German-born cultural andlt;a id="wl21"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;anthropologist Johannes Wilbert. Layrisse had, for example, discovered a genetic marker known as the and#8220;Diego factor,and#8221; a group of genes found only in people with Native American ancestry and in certain Mongolian populations in Asia. The Diego factor was initially used tentatively to classify Native American tribes into putative and#8220;early arrivalsand#8221; to the New World and and#8220;laterand#8221; populations. Layrisse and Wilbert had begun collecting blood samples to document the genetic characteristics of all the tribes in Venezuela and the andlt;a id="wl22"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;variations found among them.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;In view of the practical difficulties I would face as a result of the military coup in Brazil, Neel suggested that I consider doing my field research in a Venezuelan tribe that was close to the Brazilian border, a possibility that, as I mentioned, I was already considering. Such research was suddenly all the more possible and attractive because of Neeland#8217;s recently established connections with Layrisse in Venezuela.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;There were a number of Venezuelan tribes whose territories extended into Braziland#8212;the Pemon in the savannah region and the Amazon tropical forest Yeand#8217;kwana, for example. There were yet other Venezuelan tribes on the Colombian border that were found in both countries that I also considered, but because they were relatively easy to get to, they were more acculturated by contact with Venezuelan and Colombian nationals. I wanted to study a tribe that had had minimal contact with Western culture.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The most attractive group to me was the apparently numerous but largely unknown group, then known as the Waika. In my general reading in preparation for my comprehensive examinations for the anthropology doctoral program I had read the scant literature that existed on the Waika Indians, who were rumored to be very numerous, warlike, and isolated in the largely unexplored area on the border between Brazil and Venezuela. There were a few recently published firsthand accounts andlt;a id="page_35"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;for the Venezuelan Waika, among them several articles by an American missionary named James P. Barker, who had recently begun evangelical mission work in this area.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Layrisse and Wilbert had also recently done blood-sampling work among almost all of the tribes in Venezuela, including a few visits to small villages of Waika (sometimes called Sanema) Indians who periodically moved out of the deep forest and were in sporadic contact with the Yeand#8217;kwana Indians and the missionaries who were working with the Yeand#8217;kwana. Both the tribal names Waika and Sanema turned out to be other names for the Yanomamand#246;. Johannes Wilbert had published brief descriptions of his encounters with these somewhat mysterious Indians, but apart from Wilbertand#8217;s initial and brief reports, there was nothing substantial from anthropologists on any groups of andlt;a id="wl23"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;Venezuelan Waika Indians. Indeed, the field of cultural anthropology based on fieldwork in Venezuela was scarce in the mid-1960s.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;After a few meetings with Neel and discussions of his developing collaborative agreements with Layrisse in Venezuela, I decided to take Neeland#8217;s recommendation and begin my research among the Waika in the headwaters of the Orinoco River, a region of Venezuela called the Territorio Federal Amazonas. It was not yet a state, but rather a federal territory. In a strange sense, I felt a little like Lewis and Clark accepting Thomas Jeffersonand#8217;s commission to explore the newly purchased Louisiana Territory.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Things then happened very quickly. In November 1964, my wife, our two small children, and I departed from New York on a Venezuelan freighter. We had a large amount of personal and field equipment packed into five large fifty-five gallon metal barrels, so taking a freighter was much less expensive than flying. I was among the Yanomamand#246; (and#8220;Waikaand#8221;) Indians about two weeks after we reached Venezuela and remained there for the next seventeen months, except for two trips of ten or so days out of the jungle to see my wife and our children.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The Waika called themselves Yanomamand#246;, but so little anthropological research had been done among them that this fact either was overlooked or people simply continued to call them by a somewhat derogatory name that had been used by the few locals who came into occasional contact with them. (The word Waika seems to be derived from a Yanomamand#246; andlt;a id="page_36"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;word, waikand#228;o, meaning to and#8220;dispatch a wounded animal (or person),and#8221; in other words, administer the death blow.)andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;My contact with the world outside ceased almost entirely for the next seventeen months. For example, I was vaguely aware when I went into the Yanomamand#246; area in late 1964 that the United States had sent several hundred military advisors to South Vietnam to help train the South Vietnamese army. When I returned to Ann Arbor in 1966 the United States had some two hundred thousand combat troops there.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;In early 1966, as my initial anthropological field research drew to an end, Neel and a team of his medical researchers joined me in the Yanomamand#246; area for some two weeks as we had planned. Layrisse brought them into the Mavaca area, where I had my mud-and-thatch hut, and we worked from there. Apart from Layrisse, the only Venezuelan in the medical group that initial year was a young dentist, Dr. Charles Brewer-Carand#237;as, who had published a short monograph on the dentition of the Yeand#8217;kwana Indians. Brewer was also an avid explorer, a self-trained naturalist, and a gifted photographer.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Layrisse left the next day and returned to Caracas while Neel and a small team of medical doctors and Ph.D. candidates from his department and in other departments of the University of Michigan Medical School remained with me for some two weeks. They collected blood samples, urine, feces and saliva samples, made dental casts, and performed physical and dental examinations of all the Yanomamand#246; in each village we visited, including detailed anthropometric information. To make certain that everyoneand#8217;s data records could be pooled, I used a black felt-tip marker to put on everyoneand#8217;s arm an ID number that was linked to the genealogies I had collected during my fieldwork.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The medical team began every day by attending to those Yanomamand#246; who were sick and could be treated in the village with antibiotics and other medications found in the supplies Neeland#8217;s team brought with them andlt;a id="wl24"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;from the University of Michigan.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The analytical results from the blood and other samples the medical team obtained during the brief time they spent with me in 1966 pleased Neel immensely and he subsequently offered me a position in the Department of Human Genetics to participate in additional future field trips to the Yanomamand#246;. Although this kind of postdoctoral position would andlt;a id="page_37"andgt;andlt;/aandgt;be an academic dead end for an anthropologist, the short-term benefits were very desirable: I could analyze my field data and publish extensively without the time-consuming tasks of simultaneously preparing and teaching coursesand#8212;the standard career trajectory of new Ph.D.s in anthropology.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;But an additional attractive aspect to the appointment was that it provided me with the opportunity to return to the Yanomamand#246; as a member of a well-funded research program and continue my own anthropological field research. Finding money for relatively costly social science researchand#8212;especially for foreign travel, as is common in anthropologyand#8212;was a time-consuming and frequently disappointing process. Sometimes a young, unknown researcher had to apply to several different agencies several different times to obtain funding.andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;When I returned to Ann Arbor I wrote my doctoral dissertation, took two foreign language examinations (German and Spanish), completed the remainder of my doctoral course requirements (two courses in statistics), and successfully defended my thesis before my doctoral committee in time for the December 1966 university commencement. I was already on the University of Michigan Medical School faculty by the time I received my Ph.D. degree.