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Article 1

Doing Fieldwork among the


Yanomam1
Napoleon A. Chagnon

VIGNETTE dren and babies than there are adults. routines. It is not simply ritualistic war:
This is true of most primitive popula- At least one-fourth of all adult males die
The Yanomam are thinly scattered over tions and of our own demographic past. violently in the area I lived in.
a vast and verdant tropical forest, living Life expectancy is short.
Social life is organized around those
in small villages that are separated by The Yanomam fall into the category same principles utilized by all tribesmen:
many miles of unoccupied land. They of Tropical Forest Indians called foot kinship relationships, descent from an-
have no writing, but they have a rich and people. They avoid large rivers and live cestors, marriage exchanges between
complex language. Their clothing is in interfluvial plains of the major rivers. kinship/descent groups, and the transient
more decorative than protective. Well- They have neighbors to the north, Carib- charisma of distinguished headmen who
dressed men sport nothing more than a speaking Yekwana, who are true river attempt to keep order in the village and
few cotton strings around their wrists, people: They make elegant, large dug- whose responsibility it is to determine
ankles, and waists. They tie the foreskins out canoes and travel extensively along the villages relationships with those in
of their penises to the waist string. the major waterways. For the Yanomam, other villages. Their positions are largely
Women dress about the same. Much of a large stream is an obstacle and can be the result of kinship and marriage pat-
their daily life revolves around garden- crossed only in the dry season. Thus, they terns; they come from the largest kinship
ing, hunting, collecting wild foods, col- have traditionally avoided larger rivers and, groups within the village. They can, by
lecting firewood, fetching water, visiting because of this, contact with outsiders who their personal wit, wisdom, and cha-
with each other, gossiping, and making usually come by river. risma, become autocrats, but most of
the few material possessions they own:
They enjoy taking trips when the jun- them are largely greaters among
baskets, hammocks, bows, arrows, and
gle abounds with seasonally ripe wild equals. They, too, must clear gardens,
colorful pigments with which they paint
fruits and vegetables. Then, the large vil- plant crops, collect wild foods, and hunt.
their bodies. Life is relatively easy in the
lagethe shabonois abandoned for a They are simultaneously peacemakers
sense that they can earn a living with
few weeks and everyone camps out for and valiant warriors. Peacemaking often
about three hours work per day. Most of
from one to several days away from the requires the threat or actual use of force,
what they eat they cultivate in their gar-
village and garden. On these trips, they and most headmen have an acquired rep-
dens, and most of that is plantainsa
make temporary huts from poles, vines, utation for being waiteri: fierce.
kind of cooking banana that is usually
eaten green, either roasted on the coals or and leaves, each family making a sepa- The social dynamics within villages
boiled in pots. Their meat comes from a rate hut. are involved with giving and receiving
large variety of game animals, hunted Two major seasons dominate their an- marriageable girls. Marriages are ar-
daily by the men. It is usually roasted on nual cycle: the wet season, which inun- ranged by older kin, usually men, who
coals or smoked, and is always well dates the low-lying jungle, making travel are brothers, uncles, and the father. It is a
done. Their villages are round and difficult, and the dry seasonthe time of political process, for girls are promised
openand very public. One can hear, visiting other villages to feast, trade, and in marriage while they are young, and
see, and smell almost everything that politic with allies. The dry season is also the men who do this attempt to create al-
goes on anywhere in the village. Privacy the time when raiders can travel and liances with other men via marriage ex-
is rare, but sexual discreetness is possible strike silently at their unsuspecting ene- changes. There is a shortage of women
in the garden or at night while others mies. The Yanomam are still conduct- due in part to a sex-ratio imbalance in the
sleep. The villages can be as small as 40 ing intervillage warfare, a phenomenon younger age categories, but also compli-
to 50 people or as large as 300 people, that affects all aspects of their social or- cated by the fact that some men have
but in all cases there are many more chil- ganization, settlement pattern, and daily multiple wives. Most fighting within the

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ANNUAL EDITIONS

village stems from sexual affairs or fail- ranged in seriousness from the ordinary experiences I had among the Yanomam,
ure to deliver a promised womanor incidents of wife beating and chest the Yekwana were very pleasant and
out-and-out seizure of a married woman pounding to dueling and organized raids charming, all of them anxious to help me
by some other man. This can lead to in- by parties that set out with the intention and honor bound to show any visitor the
ternal fighting and conflict of such an in- of ambushing and killing men from en- numerous courtesies of their system of
tensity that villages split up and fission, emy villages. One of the villages was etiquette. In short, they approached the
each group then becoming a new village raided approximately twenty-five times image of primitive man that I had con-
and, often, enemies to each other. during my first 15 months of field- jured up in my mind before doing field-
But their conflicts are not blind, un- worksix times by the group among work, a kind of Rousseauian view, and
controlled violence. They have a series whom I was living. And, the history of it was sheer pleasure to work with them.
of graded forms of violence that ranges every village I investigated, from 1964 to Other anthropologists have also noted
from chest-pounding and club-fighting 1991, was intimately bound up in pat- sharp contrasts in the people they study
duels to out-and-out shooting to kill. terns of warfare with neighbors that from one field situation to another. One
This gives them a good deal of flexibility shaped its politics and determined where of the most startling examples of this is
in settling disputes without immediate it was found at any point in time and how in the work of Colin Turnbull, who first
resort to lethal violence. In addition, they it dealt with its current neighbors. studied the Ituri Pygmies (1965, 1983)
have developed patterns of alliance and The fact that the Yanomam have and found them delightful to live with,
friendship that serve to limit violence lived in a chronic state of warfare is re- but then studied the Ik (1972) of the des-
trading and feasting with others in order flected in their mythology, ceremonies, olate outcroppings of the Kenya/
to become friends. These alliances can, settlement pattern, political behavior, Uganda/Sudan border region, a people
and often do, result in intervillage ex- and marriage practices. Accordingly, I he had difficulty coping with intellectu-
changes of marriageable women, which have organized this case study in such a ally, emotionally, and physically. While
leads to additional amity between vil- way that students can appreciate the ef- it is possible that the anthropologists re-
lages. No good thing lasts forever, and fects of warfare on Yanomam culture in actions to a particular people are per-
most alliances crumble. Old friends be- general and on their social organization sonal and idiosyncratic, it nevertheless
come hostile and, occasionally, treacher- and political relationships in particular. remains true that there are enormous dif-
ous. Each village must therefore be I collected the data under somewhat ferences between whole peoples, differ-
keenly aware that its neighbors are fickle trying circumstances, some of which I ences that affect the anthropologist in
and must behave accordingly. The thin will describe to give a rough idea of what often dramatic ways.
line between friendship and animosity is generally meant when anthropologists Hence, what I say about some of my
must be traversed by the village leaders, speak of culture shock and fieldwork. experiences is probably equally true of
whose political acumen and strategies It should be borne in mind, however, that the experiences of many other field-
are both admirable and complex. each field situation is in many respects workers. I describe some of them here
Each village, then, is a replica of all unique, so that the problems I encoun- for the benefit of future anthropolo-
others in a broad sense. But each village tered do not necessarily exhaust the gistsbecause I think I could have prof-
is part of a larger political, demographic, range of possible problems other anthro- ited by reading about the pitfalls and
and ecological process, and it is difficult pologists have confronted in other areas. field problems of my own teachers. At
to attempt to understand the village with- There are a few problems, however, that the very least I might have been able to
out knowing something of the larger seem to be nearly universal among an- avoid some of my more stupid errors. In
forces that affect it and its particular his- thropological fieldworkers, particularly this regard there is a growing body of ex-
tory with all its neighbors. those having to do with eating, bathing, cellent descriptive work on field re-
sleeping, lack of privacy, loneliness, or search. Students who plan to make a
discovering that the people you are liv- career in anthropology should consult
COLLECTING THE DATA
ing with have a lower opinion of you these works, which cover a wide range of
IN THE FIELD field situations in the ethnographic
than you have of them or you yourself
I have now spent over 60 months with are not as culturally or emotionally flex- present.3
Yanomam, during which time I gradu- ible as you assumed.
ally learned their language and, up to a The Yanomam can be difficult The Longest Day: The First One
point, submerged myself in their culture people to live with at times, but I have My first day in the field illustrated to me
and way of life.2 As my research pro- spoken to colleagues who have had dif- what my teachers meant when they
gressed, the thing that impressed me ficulties living in the communities they spoke of culture shock. I had traveled
most was the importance that aggression studied. These things vary from society in a small, aluminum rowboat propelled
played in shaping their culture. I had the to society, and probably from one anthro- by a large outboard motor for two and a
opportunity to witness a good many inci- pologist to the next. I have also done lim- half days. This took me from the territo-
dents that expressed individual vindic- ited fieldwork among the Yanomams rial capital, a small town on the Orinoco
tiveness on the one hand and collective northern neighbors, the Carib-speaking River, deep into Yanomam country. On
bellicosity on the other hand. These Yekwana Indians. By contrast to many the morning of the third day we reached

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Article 1. Doing Fieldwork among the Yanomamo

a small mission settlement, the field mined to work my way into their moral We had arrived just after a serious
headquarters of a group of Americans system of kinship and become a member fight. Seven women had been abducted
who were working in two Yanomam of their societyto be accepted by the day before by a neighboring group,
villages. The missionaries had come out them. and the local men and their guests had
of these villages to hold their annual con- just that morning recovered five of
ference on the progress of their mission How Did They Accept You? them in a brutal club fight that nearly
work and were conducting their meet- My heart began to pound as we ap- ended in a shooting war. The abductors,
ings when I arrived. We picked up a pas- proached the village and heard the buzz angry because they had lost five of their
senger at the mission station, James P. of activity within the circular compound. seven new captives, vowed to raid the
Barker, the first non-Yanomam to Mr. Barker commented that he was anx- Bisaasi-teri. When we arrived and en-
make a sustained, permanent contact ious to see if any changes had taken tered the village unexpectedly, the In-
with the tribe (in 1950). He had just re- place while he was away and wondered dians feared that we were the raiders.
turned from a years furlough in the how many of them had died during his On several occasions during the next
United States, where I had earlier visited absence. I nervously felt my back pocket two hours the men in the village
him before leaving for Venezuela. He to make sure that my notebook was still jumped to their feet, armed themselves,
agreed to accompany me to the village I there and felt personally more secure nocked their arrows and waited ner-
had selected for my base of operations to when I touched it. vously for the noise outside the village
introduce me to the Indians. This village The entrance to the village was cov- to be identified. My enthusiasm for col-
was also his own home base, but he had ered over with brush and dry palm lecting ethnographic facts diminished
not been there for over a year and did not leaves. We pushed them aside to expose in proportion to the number of times
plan to join me for another three months. the low opening to the village. The ex- such an alarm was raised. In fact, I was
Mr. Barker had been living with this par- citement of meeting my first Yanomam relieved when Barker suggested that we
ticular group about five years. was almost unbearable as I duck-wad- sleep across the river for the evening. It
We arrived at the village, Bisaasi-teri, dled through the low passage into the vil- would be safer over there.
about 2:00 P.M. and docked the boat lage clearing. As we walked down the path to the
along the muddy bank at the terminus of I looked up and gasped when I saw a boat, I pondered the wisdom of having
the path used by Yanomam to fetch dozen burly, naked, sweaty, hideous men decided to spend a year and a half with
their drinking water. It was hot and staring at us down the shafts of their these people before I had even seen what
muggy, and my clothing was soaked drawn arrows! Immense wads of green they were like. I am not ashamed to ad-
with perspiration. It clung uncomfort- tobacco were stuck between their lower mit that had there been a diplomatic way
ably to my body, as it did thereafter for teeth and lips making them look even out, I would have ended my fieldwork
the remainder of the work. The small bit- more hideous, and strands of dark-green then and there. I did not look forward to
ing gnats, bareto, were out in astronomi- slime dripped or hung from their nos- the next dayand monthswhen I
cal numbers, for it was the beginning of trilsstrands so long that they clung to would be left alone with the Yanomam;
the dry season. My face and hands were their pectoral muscles or drizzled down I did not speak a word of their language,
swollen from the venom of their numer- their chins. We arrived at the village and they were decidedly different from
ous stings. In just a few moments I was while the men were blowing a hallucino- what I had imagined them to be. The
to meet my first Yanomam, my first genic drug up their noses. One of the side whole situation was depressing, and I
primitive man. What would he be like? I effects of the drug is a runny nose. The wondered why I ever decided to switch
had visions of entering the village and mucus is always saturated with the green from physics and engineering in the first
seeing 125 social facts running about al- powder and they usually let it run freely place. I had not eaten all day, I was soak-
truistically calling each other kinship from their nostrils. My next discovery ing wet from perspiration, the bareto
terms and sharing food, each waiting and was that there were a dozen or so vicious, were biting me, and I was covered with
anxious to have me collect his geneal- underfed dogs snapping at my legs, cir- red pigment, the result of a dozen or so
ogy. I would wear them out in turn. cling me as if I were to be their next complete examinations I had been given
Would they like me? This was important meal. I just stood there holding my note- by as many very pushy Yanomam men.
to me; I wanted them to be so fond of me book, helpless and pathetic. Then the These examinations capped an otherwise
that they would adopt me into their kin- stench of the decaying vegetation and grim day. The men would blow their
ship system and way of life. I had heard filth hit me and I almost got sick. I was noses into their hands, flick as much of
that successful anthropologists always horrified. What kind of welcome was the mucus off that would separate in a
get adopted by their people. I had learned this for the person who came here to live snap of the wrist, wipe the residue into
during my seven years of anthropologi- with you and learn your way of life, to their hair, and then carefully examine my
cal training at the University of Michi- become friends with you? They put their face, arms, legs, hair, and the contents of
gan that kinship was equivalent to weapons down when they recognized my pockets. I asked Barker how to say,
society in primitive tribes and that it was Barker and returned to their chanting, Your hands are dirty; my comments
a moral way of life, moral being some- keeping a nervous eye on the village en- were met by the Yanomam in the fol-
thing good and desirable. I was deter- trances. lowing way: They would clean their

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hands by spitting a quantity of slimy to- could do considerably more fieldwork Yanomam, and the elements, thereby
bacco juice into them, rub them together, and be less well fed and less comfort- eliminating the need for my complicated
grin, and then proceed with the examina- able. storage process. I was able to last most of
tion. It is appalling how complicated it can the day on caf con leche, heavily sug-
Mr. Barker and I crossed the river and be to make oatmeal in the jungle. First, I ared espresso coffee diluted about five to
slung our hammocks. When he pulled his had to make two trips to the river to haul one with hot milk. I would prepare this in
hammock out of a rubber bag, a heavy the water. Next, I had to prime my kero- the evening and store it in a large ther-
disagreeable odor of mildewed cotton sene stove with alcohol to get it burning, mos. Frequently, my single meal was no
and stale wood smoke came with it. a tricky procedure when you are trying to more complicated than a can of sardines
Even the missionaries are filthy, I mix powdered milk and fill a coffee pot and a package of soggy crackers. But at
thought to myself. Within two weeks, at the same time. The alcohol prime al- least two or three times a week I would
everything I owned smelled the same ways burned out before I could turn the do something special and sophisti-
way, and I lived with that odor for the re- kerosene on, and I would have to start all cated, like make a batch of oatmeal or
mainder of the fieldwork. My own habits over. Or, I would turn the kerosene on, boil rice and add a can of tuna fish or to-
of personal cleanliness declined to such optimistically hoping that the Coleman mato paste to it. I even saved time by de-
levels that I didnt even mind being ex- element was still hot enough to vaporize vising a water system that obviated the
amined by the Yanomam, as I was not the fuel, and start a small fire in my trips to the river. I had a few sheets of tin
much cleaner than they were after I had palm-thatched hut as the liquid kerosene roofing brought in and made a rain water
adjusted to the circumstances. It is diffi- squirted all over the table and walls and trap; I caught the water on the tin surface,
cult to blow your nose gracefully when then ignited. Many amused Yanomam funneled it into an empty gasoline drum,
you are stark naked and the invention of onlookers quickly learned the English and then ran a plastic hose from the drum
handkerchiefs is millenia away. phrase Oh, Shit! and, once they discov- to my hut. When the drum was exhausted
ered that the phrase offended and irri- in the dry season, I would get a few Ya-
Life in the Jungle: Oatmeal, Peanut tated the missionaries, they used it as nomam boys to fill it with buckets of
Butter, and Bugs often as they could in their presence. I water from the river, paying them with
It isnt easy to plop down in the Amazon usually had to start over with the alcohol. crackers, of which they grew all too fond
Basin for a year and get immediately into Then I had to boil the oatmeal and pick all too soon.
the anthropological swing of things. You the bugs out of it. All my supplies, of I ate much less when I traveled with
have been told about horrible diseases, course, were carefully stored in rat- the Yanomam to visit other villages.
snakes, jaguars, electric eels, little spiny proof, moisture-proof, and insect-proof Most of the time my travel diet consisted
fish that will swim up your urine into containers, not one of which ever served of roasted or boiled green plantains
your penis, quicksand, and getting lost. its purpose adequately. Just taking things (cooking bananas) that I obtained from
Some of the dangers are real, but your out of the multiplicity of containers and the Yanomam, but I always carried a
imagination makes them more real and repacking them afterward was a minor few cans of sardines with me in case I got
threatening than many of them really are. project in itself. By the time I had hauled lost or stayed away longer than I had
What my teachers never bothered to ad- the water to cook with, unpacked my planned. I found peanut butter and crack-
vise me about, however, was the mun- food, prepared the oatmeal, milk, and ers a very nourishing trail meal, and a
dane, nonexciting, and trivial stufflike coffee, heated water for dishes, washed simple one to prepare. It was nutritious
eating, defecating, sleeping, or keeping and dried the dishes, repacked the food and portable, and only one tool was re-
clean. These turned out to be the bane of in the containers, stored the containers in quired to make the meal: a hunting knife
my existence during the first several locked trunks, and cleaned up my mess, that could be cleaned by wiping the blade
months of field research. I set up my the ceremony of preparing breakfast had on a convenient leaf. More importantly,
household in Barkers abandoned mud brought me almost up to lunch time! it was one of the few foods the Ya-
hut, a few yards from the village of Eating three meals a day was simply nomam would let me eat in relative
Bisaasi-teri, and immediately set to work out of the question. I solved the problem peace. It looked suspiciously like animal
building my own mud/thatch hut with by eating a single meal that could be pre- feces to them, an impression I encour-
the help of the Yanomam. Meanwhile, pared in a single container, or, at most, in aged. I referred to the peanut butter as the
I had to eat and try to do my field re- two containers, washed my dishes only feces of babies or cattle. They found
search. I soon discovered that it was when there were no clean ones left, using this disgusting and repugnant. They did
an enormously time-consuming task to cold river water, and wore each change not know what cattle were, but were
maintain my own body in the manner of clothing at least a week to cut down on increasingly aware that I ate several
to which it had grown accustomed in my laundry problema courageous un- canned products of such an animal. Tin
the relatively antiseptic environment dertaking in the tropics. I reeked like a cans were thought of as containers made
of the northern United States. Either I jockstrap that had been left to mildew in of machete skins, but how the cows got
could be relatively well fed and rela- the bottom of some dark gym locker. I inside was always a mystery to them. I
tively comfortable in a fresh change of also became less concerned about shar- went out of my way to describe my foods
clothes and do very little fieldwork, or I ing my provisions with the rats, insects, in such a way as to make them sound un-

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Article 1. Doing Fieldwork among the Yanomamo

palatable to them, for it gave me some them at their request, some of them al- time I discovered this. The loss of the
peace of mind while I ate: They wouldnt ways showed up at my hut during meal- possessions bothered me much less than
beg for a share of something that was too time. I gradually resigned myself to this the shock that I was, as far as most of
horrible to contemplate. Fieldworkers and learned to ignore their persistent de- them were concerned, nothing more than
develop strange defense mechanisms mands while I ate. Some of them would a source of desirable items. No holds
and strategies, and this was one of my get angry because I failed to give in, but were barred in relieving me of these,
own forms of adaptation to the field- most of them accepted it as just a pecu- since I was considered something sub-
work. On another occasion I was eating a liarity of the subhuman foreigner who human, a non-Yanomam.
can of frankfurters and growing very had come to live among them. If or when The hardest thing to learn to live with
weary of the demands from one of the I did accede to a request for a share of my was the incessant, passioned, and often
onlookers for a share in my meal. When food, my hut quickly filled with Ya- aggressive demands they would make. It
he finally asked what I was eating, I re- nomam, each demanding their share of would become so unbearable at times
plied: Beef. He then asked: Shaki!4 the food that I had just given to one of that I would have to lock myself in my
What part of the animal are you eating? them. Their begging for food was not hut periodically just to escape from it.
To which I replied, Guess. He muttered provoked by hunger, but by a desire to Privacy is one of our cultures most sat-
a contemptuous epithet, but stopped ask- try something new and to attempt to es- isfying achievements, one you never
ing for a share. He got back at me later, tablish a coercive relationship in which I think about until you suddenly have
as we shall see. would accede to a demand. If one re- none. It is like not appreciating how
Meals were a problem in a way that ceived something, all others would im- good your left thumb feels until someone
had nothing to do with the inconvenience mediately have to test the system to see hits it with a hammer. But I did not want
of preparing them. Food sharing is im- if they, too, could coerce me. privacy for its own sake; rather, I simply
portant to the Yanomam in the context A few of them went out of their way had to get away from the begging. Day
of displaying friendship. I am hungry! to make my meals downright unpleas- and night for almost the entire time I
is almost a form of greeting with them. I antto spite me for not sharing, espe- lived with the Yanomam, I was plagued
could not possibly have brought enough cially if it was a food that they had tried by such demands as: Give me a knife, I
food with me to feed the entire village, before and liked, or a food that was part am poor!; If you dont take me with
yet they seemed to overlook this logistic of their own cuisine. For example, I was you on your next trip to Widokaiyateri,
fact as they begged for my food. What eating a cracker with peanut butter and Ill chop a hole in your canoe!; Take us
became fixed in their minds was the fact honey one day. The Yanomam will do hunting up the Mavaca River with your
that I did not share my food with whom- almost anything for honey, one of the shotgun or we wont help you!; Give
soever was presentusually a small most prized delicacies in their own diet. me some matches so I can trade with the
crowdat each and every meal. Nor One of my cynical onlookersthe fel- Reyabobwei-teri, and be quick about it
could I easily enter their system of reci- low who had earlier watched me eating or Ill hit you!; Share your food with
procity with respect to food. Every time frankfurtersimmediately recognized me, or Ill burn your hut!; Give me a
one of them gave me something the honey and knew that I would not flashlight so I can hunt at night!; Give
freely, he would dog me for months to share the tiny precious bottle. It would be me all your medicine, I itch all over!;
pay him back, not necessarily with futile to even ask. Instead, he glared at Give me an ax or Ill break into your hut
food but with knives, fishhooks, axes, me and queried icily, Shaki! What kind when you are away and steal all of
and so on. Thus, if I accepted a plantain of animal semen are you pouring onto them! And so I was bombarded by such
from someone in a different village your food and eating? His question had demands day after day, month after
while I was on a visit, he would most the desired effect and my meal ended. month, until I could not bear to see a Ya-
likely visit me in the future and demand Finally, there was the problem of be- nomam at times.
a machete as payment for the time that he ing lonely and separated from your own It was not as difficult to become cal-
fed me. I usually reacted to these kinds kind, especially your family. I tried to loused to the incessant begging as it
of demands by giving a banana, the cus- overcome this by seeking personal was to ignore the sense of urgency, the
tomary reciprocity in their culturefood friendships among the Yanomam. This impassioned tone of voice and whining,
for foodbut this would be a disap- usually complicated the matter because or the intimidation and aggression with
pointment for the individual who had all my friends simply used my confi- which many of the demands were
nursed visions of that single plantain dence to gain privileged access to my hut made. It was likewise difficult to adjust
growing into a machete over time. Many and my cache of steel tools and trade to the fact that the Yanomam refused to
years after beginning my fieldwork, I goodsand looted me when I wasnt accept No for an answer until or unless
was approached by one of the prominent looking. I would be bitterly disappointed it seethed with passion and intimida-
men who demanded a machete for a that my erstwhile friend thought no more tionwhich it did after a few months. So
piece of meat he claimed he had given of me than to finesse our personal rela- persistent and characteristic is the beg-
me five or six years earlier. tionship exclusively with the intention of ging that the early semiofficial maps
Despite the fact that most of them getting at my locked up possessions, and made by the Venezuelan Malaria Con-
knew I would not share my food with my depression would hit new lows every trol Service (Malarialoga) designated

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ANNUAL EDITIONS

the site of their first permanent field sta- to much dangerunless the wife has The long-awaited mission supply boat
tion, next to the village of Bisaasi-teri, as concerned, aggressive brothers in the vil- arrived and most of the Yanomam ran
Yababuhii: Gimme. I had to become lage who will come to her aid. Appar- out of the village to see the supplies and
like the Yanomam to be able to get ently an important thing in wife beating try to beg items from the crew. I contin-
along with them on their terms: some- is that the man has displayed his pre- ued to work in the village for another
what sly, aggressive, intimidating, and sumed potential for violence and the in- hour or so and then went down to the
pushy. tended message is that other men ought river to visit with the men on the supply
It became indelibly clear to me to treat him with circumspection, cau- boat. When I reached the river I noticed,
shortly after I arrived there that had I tion, and even deference. with anger and frustration, that the Ya-
failed to adjust in this fashion I would After six months, the level of Ya- nomam had chopped up all my new
have lost six months of supplies to them nomam demand was tolerable in floor boards to use as crude paddles to
in a single day or would have spent most Bisaasi-teri, the village I used for my get their own canoes across the river to
of my time ferrying them around in my base of operations. We had adjusted the supply boat.5 I knew that if I ig-
canoe or taking them on long hunting somewhat to each other and knew what nored this abuse I would have invited
trips. As it was, I did spend a consider- to expect with regard to demands for the Yanomam to take even greater
able amount of time doing these things food, trade goods, and favors. Had I liberties with my possessions in the fu-
and did succumb often to their outra- elected to remain in just one Yanomam ture. I got into my canoe, crossed the
geous demands for axes and machetes, at village for the entire duration of my first river, and docked amidst their flimsy,
least at first, for things changed as I be- 15 months of fieldwork, the experience leaky craft. I shouted loudly to them, at-
came more fluent in their language and would have been far more enjoyable than tracting their attention. They were some-
learned how to defend myself socially as it actually was. However, as I began to what sheepish, but all had mischievous
well as verbally. More importantly, had I understand the social and political dy- grins on their impish faces. A few of
failed to demonstrate that I could not be namics of this village, it became patently them came down to the canoe, where I
pushed around beyond a certain point, I obvious that I would have to travel to proceeded with a spirited lecture that re-
would have been the subject of far more many other villages to determine the de- vealed my anger at their audacity and li-
ridicule, theft, and practical jokes than mographic bases and political histories cense. I explained that I had just that
was the actual case. In short, I had to ac- that lay behind what I could understand morning paid one of them a machete for
quire a certain proficiency in their style in the village of Bisaasi-teri. I began bringing me the palmwood, how hard I
of interpersonal politics and to learn how making regular trips to some dozen had worked to shape each board and
to imply subtly that certain potentially neighboring Yanomam villages as my place it in the canoe, how carefully and
undesirable, but unspecified, conse- language fluency improved. I collected painstakingly I had tied each one in with
quences might follow if they did such local genealogies there, or rechecked and vines, how much I had perspired, how
and such to me. They do this to each cross-checked those I had collected else- many bareto bites I had suffered, and so
other incessantly in order to establish where. Hence, the intensity of begging on. Then, with exaggerated drama and fi-
precisely the point at which they cannot was relatively constant and relatively nality, I withdrew my hunting knife as
goad or intimidate an individual any fur- high for the duration of my fieldwork, their grins disappeared and cut each one
ther without precipitating some kind of for I had to establish my personal posi- of their canoes loose and set it into the
retaliation. As soon as I realized this and tion in each village I visited and revis- strong current of the Orinoco River
gradually acquired the self-confidence to ited. where it was immediately swept up and
adopt this strategy, it became clear that For the most part, my own fierce- carried downstream. I left without look-
much of the intimidation was calculated ness took the form of shouting back at ing back and huffed over to the other side
to determine my flash point or my last the Yanomam as loudly and as passion- of the river to resume my work.
ditch positionand I got along much ately as they shouted at me, especially at They managed to borrow another ca-
better with them. Indeed, I even regained first, when I did not know much of the noe and, after some effort, recovered
some lost ground. It was sort of like a po- language. As I became more fluent and their dugouts. Later, the headman of the
litical, interpersonal game that everyone learned more about their political tactics, village told me, with an approving
had to play, but one in which each indi- I became more sophisticated in the art of chuckle, that I had done the correct thing.
vidual sooner or later had to give evi- bluffing and brinksmanship. For exam- Everyone in the village, except, of
dence that his bluffs and implied threats ple, I paid one young man a machete course, the culprits, supported and de-
could be backed up with a sanction. I (then worth about $2.50) to cut a palm fended my actionsand my status in-
suspect that the frequency of wife beat- tree and help me make boards from the creased as a consequence.
ing is a component in this syndrome, wood. I used these to fashion a flooring Whenever I defended myself in such
since men can display their waiteri (fe- in the bottom of my dugout canoe to ways I got along much better with the
rocity) and show others that they are keep my possessions out of the water that Yanomam and gradually acquired the
capable of great violence. Beating a wife always seeped into the canoe and sloshed respect of many of them. A good deal of
with a club is one way of displaying fe- around. That afternoon I was working their demeanor toward me was directed
rocity, one that does not expose the man with one of my informants in the village. with the forethought of establishing the

6
Article 1. Doing Fieldwork among the Yanomamo

point at which I would draw the line and people to work with in this regard. They determined to learn everyones true
react defensively. Many of them, years have very stringent name taboos and es- name, which amounted to an invasion of
later, reminisced about the early days of chew mentioning the names of promi- their system of prestige and etiquette, if
my fieldwork when I was timid and mo- nent living people as well as all deceased not a flagrant violation of it. They re-
hode (stupid) and a little afraid of friends and relatives. They attempt to acted to this in a brilliant but devastating
them, those golden days when it was name people in such a way that when the manner: They invented false names for
easy to bully me into giving my goods person dies and they can no longer use everybody in the village and systemati-
away for almost nothing. his or her name, the loss of the word in cally learned them, freely revealing to
Theft was the most persistent situa- their language is not inconvenient. me the true identities of everyone. I
tion that required some sort of defensive Hence, they name people for specific and smugly thought I had cracked the system
action. I simply could not keep every- minute parts of things, such as toenail of and enthusiastically constructed elabo-
thing I owned locked in trunks, and the sloth, whisker of howler monkey, and rate genealogies over a period of some
Yanomam came into my hut and left at so on, thereby being able to retain the five months. They enjoyed watching me
will. I eventually developed a very effec- words toenail or whisker but some- learn their names and kinship relation-
tive strategy for recovering almost all the what handicapped in referring to these ships. I naively assumed that I would get
stolen items: I would simply ask a child anatomical parts of sloths and monkeys the truth to each question and the best
who took the item and then I would con- respectively. The taboo is maintained information by working in public. This
fiscate that persons hammock when he even for the living, for one mark of pres- set the stage for converting my serious
was not around, giving a spirited lecture tige is the courtesy others show you by project into an amusing hoax of the
to all who could hear on the antisociality not using your name publicly. This is grandest proportions. Each informant
of thievery as I stalked off in a faked rage particularly true for men, who are much would try to outdo his peers by inventing
with the thiefs hammock slung over my more competitive for status than women a name even more preposterous or ridic-
shoulder. Nobody ever attempted to stop in this culture, and it is fascinating to ulous than what I had been given by
me from doing this, and almost all of watch boys grow into young men, de- someone earlier, the explanations for
them told me that my technique for re- manding to be called either by a kinship discrepancies being Well, he has two
covering my possessions was ingenious. term in public, or by a teknonymous ref- names and this is the other one. They
By nightfall the thief would appear at my erence such as brother of Himotoma. even fabricated devilishly improbable
hut with the stolen item or send it over The more effective they are at getting genealogical relationships, such as
with someone else to make an exchange others to avoid using their names, the someone being married to his grand-
to recover his hammock. He would be more public acknowledgment there is mother, or worse yet, to his mother-in-
heckled by his covillagers for having got that they are of high esteem and social law, a grotesque and horrifying prospect
caught and for being embarrassed into standing. Helena Valero, a Brazilian to the Yanomam. I would collect the
returning my item for his hammock. The woman who was captured as a child by a desired names and relationships by hav-
explanation was usually, I just bor- Yanomam raiding party, was married ing my informant whisper the name of
rowed your ax! I wouldnt think of steal- for many years to a Yanomam headman the person softly into my ear, noting that
ing it! before she discovered what his name was he or she was the parent of such and such
(Biocca, 1970; Valero, 1984). The sanc- or the child of such and such, and so on.
Collecting Ydnomam Genealogies tions behind the taboo are more complex Everyone who was observing my work
and Reproductive Histories than just this, for they involve a combi- would then insist that I repeat the name
My purpose for living among Yanomam nation of fear, respect, admiration, polit- aloud, roaring in hysterical laughter as I
was to systematically collect certain kinds ical deference, and honor. clumsily pronounced the name, some-
of information on genealogy, reproduc- At first I tried to use kinship terms alone times laughing until tears streamed down
tion, marriage practices, kinship, settle- to collect genealogies, but Yanomam kin- their faces. The named person would
ment patterns, migrations, and politics. ship terms, like the kinship terms in all sys- usually react with annoyance and hiss
Much of the fundamental data was gene- tems, are ambiguous at some point because some untranslatable epithet at me, which
alogicalwho was the parent of whom, they include so many possible relatives (as served to reassure me that I had the true
tracing these connections as far back in the term uncle does in our own kinship name. I conscientiously checked and re-
time as Yanomam knowledge and system). Again, their system of kin clas- checked the names and relationships
memory permitted. Since primitive so- sification merges many relatives that we with multiple informants, pleased to see
ciety is organized largely by kinship re- separate by using different terms: They the inconsistencies disappear as my ge-
lationships, figuring out the social call both their actual father and their fa- nealogy sheets filled with those desirable
organization of the Yanomam essen- thers brother by a single term, whereas little triangles and circles, thousands of
tially meant collecting extensive data on we call one father and the other uncle. them.
genealogies, marriage, and reproduction. I was forced, therefore, to resort to per- My anthropological bubble was burst
This turned out to be a staggering and sonal names to collect unambiguous ge- when I visited a village about 10 hours
very frustrating problem. I could not nealogies or pedigrees. They quickly walk to the southwest of Bisaasi-teri
have deliberately picked a more difficult grasped what I was up to and that I was some five months after I had begun col-

7
ANNUAL EDITIONS

lecting genealogies on the Bisaasi-teri. I time. Even my best informants continued She had been promised to a young man
was chatting with the local headman of to falsify names of the deceased, espe- in the village, a man named Rerebaw,
this village and happened to casually cially closely related deceased. The falsi- who was particularly aggressive. He had
drop the name of the wife of the Bisaasi- fications at this point were not serious married into Bisaasi-teri and was doing
teri headman. A stunned silence fol- and turned out to be readily corrected as his bride servicea period of several
lowed, and then a villagewide roar of un- my interviewing methods improved (see years during which he had to provide
controllable laughter, choking, gasping, below). Most of the deceptions were of game for his wifes father and mother,
and howling followed. It seems that I the sort where the informant would give provide them with wild foods he might
thought the Bisaasi-teri headman was me the name of a living man as the father collect, and help them in certain garden-
married to a woman named hairy cunt. of some child whose actual father was ing and other tasks. Rerebaw had al-
It also seems that the Bisaasi-teri head- dead, a response that enabled the infor- ready been given one of the daughters in
man was called long dong and his mant to avoid using the name of a de- marriage and was promised her younger
brother eagle shit. The Bisaasi-teri ceased kinsman or friend. sister as his second wife. He was enraged
headman had a son called asshole and The quality of a genealogy depends in when the younger sister, then about 16
a daughter called fart breath. And so part on the number of generations it em- years old, began having an affair with
on. Blood welled up my temples as I re- braces, and the name taboo prevented me another young man in the village, Bko-
alized that I had nothing but nonsense to from making any substantial progress in taw, making no attempt to conceal it.
show for my five months of dedicated learning about the deceased ancestors of the Rerebaw challenged Bkotaw to a
genealogical effort, and I had to throw present population. Without this informa- club fight. He swaggered boisterously
away almost all the information I had tion, I could not, for example, document out to the duel with his 10-foot-long
collected on this the most basic set of marriage patterns and interfamilial alliances club, a roof-pole he had cut from the
data I had come there to get. I understood through time. I had to rely on older infor- house on the spur of the moment, as is
at that point why the Bisaasi-teri laughed mants for this information, but these were the usual procedure. He hurled insult af-
so hard when they made me repeat the the most reluctant informants of all for this ter insult at both Bkotaw and his fa-
names of their covillagers, and why the data. As I became more proficient in the lan- ther, trying to goad them into a fight. His
named person would react with anger guage and more skilled at detecting fabrica- insults were bitter and nasty. They toler-
and annoyance as I pronounced his tions, any informants became better at ated them for a few moments, but Re-
name aloud. deception. One old man was particularly rebaws biting insults provoked them to
I was forced to change research strat- cunning and persuasive, following a sort of rage. Finally, they stormed angrily out of
egyto make an understatement to de- Mark Twain policy that the most effective their hammocks and ripped out roof-
scribe this serious situation. The first lie is a sincere lie. He specialized in making poles, now returning the insults verbally,
thing I did was to begin working in pri- a ceremony out of false names for dead an- and rushed to the village clearing. Re-
vate with my informants to eliminate the cestors. He would look around nervously to rebaw continued to insult them, goad-
horseplay and distraction that attended make sure nobody was listening outside my ing them into striking him on the head
public sessions. Once I did this, my in- hut, enjoin me never to mention the name with their equally long clubs. Had either
formants, who did not know what others again, become very anxious and spooky, of them struck his headwhich he held
were telling me, began to agree with and grab me by the head to whisper a secret out conspicuously for them to swing at
each other and I managed to begin learn- name into my ear. I was always elated after he would then have the right to take his
ing the real names, starting first with a session with him, because I managed to turn on their heads with his club. His op-
children and gradually moving to adult add several generations of ancestors for par- ponents were intimidated by his fury,
women and then, cautiously, adult men, ticular members of the village. Others stead- and simply backed down, refusing to
a sequence that reflected the relative de- fastly refused to give me such information. strike him, and the argument ended. He
gree of intransigence at revealing names To show my gratitude, I paid him quadruple had intimidated them into submission.
of people. As I built up a core of accurate the rate that I had been paying the others. All three retired pompously to their re-
genealogies and relationshipsa core When word got around that I had increased spective hammocks, exchanging nasty
that all independent informants had veri- the pay for genealogical and demographic insults as they departed. But Rerebaw
fied repetitiouslyI could test any information, volunteers began pouring into had won the showdown and thereafter
new informant by soliciting his or her my hut to work for me, assuring me of swaggered around the village, insult-
opinion and knowledge about these their changed ways and keen desire to divest ing the two men behind their backs at
core people whose names and relation- themselves of the truth. every opportunity. He was genuinely
ships I was confident were accurate. I angry with them, to the point of calling
was, in this fashion, able to immediately Enter Rerebaw: Inmarried Tough the older man by the name of his long-
weed out the mischievous informants Guy deceased father. I quickly seized on
who persisted in trying to deceive me. I discovered that the old man was lying this incident as an opportunity to col-
Still, I had great difficulty getting the quite by accident. A club fight broke out lect an accurate genealogy and confi-
names of dead kinsmen, the only accu- in the village one day, the result of a dis- dentially asked Rerebaw about his
rate way to extend genealogies back in pute over the possession of a woman. adversarys ancestors. Rerebaw had

8
Article 1. Doing Fieldwork among the Yanomamo

been particularly pushy with me up to the village of Bisaasi-teri and check with mantly, explaining that she was a close
this point, but we soon became warm local informants the accuracy of the new relativeand was angry that I even
friends and staunch allies: We were both information. I had to be careful in this raised the topic with him. I then asked
outsiders in Bisaasi-teri and, although work and scrupulously select my local him if he would let me whisper the
he was a Yanomam, he nevertheless informants in such a way that I would not names of all the women of that village in
had to put up with some considerable be inquiring about their closely related his ear, and he would simply have to nod
amount of pointed teasing and scorn kin. Thus, for each of my local infor- when I hit the right name. We had been
from the locals, as all inmarried sons-in- mants, I had to make lists of names of friends for some time, and I thought I
law must. He gave me the information I certain deceased people that I dared not was able to predict his reaction, and
requested of his adversarys deceased mention in their presence. But despite thought that our friendship was good
ancestors, almost with devilish glee. I this precaution, I would occasionally hit enough to use this procedure. He agreed
asked about dead ancestors of other peo- a new name that would put some infor- to the procedure, and I began whispering
ple in the village and got prompt, un- mants into a rage, or into a surly mood, the names of the women, one by one. We
equivocal answers: He was angry with such as that of a dead brother or sis- were alone in my hut so that nobody
everyone in the village. When I com- ter6 whose existence had not been indi- would know what we were doing and no-
pared his answers to those of the old cated to me by other informants. This body could hear us. I read the names
man, it was obvious that one of them was usually terminated my days work with softly, continuing to the next when his
lying. I then challenged his answers. He that informant, for he or she would be too response was a negative. When I ulti-
explained, in a sort of you damned fool, touchy or upset to continue any further, mately hit the dead womans name, he
dont you know better? tone of voice and I would be reluctant to take a chance flew out of his chair, enraged and trem-
that everyone in the village knew the old on accidentally discovering another dead bling violently, his arm raised to strike
man was lying to me and gloating over it close kinsman soon after discovering the me: You son-of-a-bitch! he screamed.
when I was out of earshot. The names the first. If you say her name in my presence
old man had given to me were names of These were unpleasant experiences, again, Ill kill you in an instant! I sat
dead ancestors of the members of a vil- and occasionally dangerous as well, de- there, bewildered, shocked, and con-
lage so far away that he thought I would pending on the temperament of my infor- fused. And frightened, as much because
never have occasion to check them out mant. On one occasion I was planning of his reaction, but also because I could
authoritatively. As it turned out, Re- to visit a village that had been raided imagine what might happen to me should
rebaw knew most of the people in that recently by one of their enemies. A I unknowingly visit a village to check ge-
distant village and recognized the names woman, whose name I had on my cen- nealogy accuracy without knowing that
given by the old man. sus list for that village, had been killed someone had just died there or had been
I then went over all my Bisaasi-teri by the raiders. Killing women is consid- shot by raiders since my last visit. I re-
genealogies with Rerebaw, genealogies ered to be bad form in Yanomam war- flected on the several articles I had read
I had presumed to be close to their final fare, but this woman was deliberately as a graduate student that explained the
form. I had to revise them all because of killed for revenge. The raiders were un- genealogical method, but could not re-
the numerous lies and falsifications they able to bushwhack some man who call anything about its being a potentially
contained, much of it provided by the sly stepped out of the village at dawn to uri- lethal undertaking. My furious informant
old man. Once again, after months of nate, so they shot a volley of arrows over left my hut, never again to be invited
work, I had to recheck everything with the roof into the village and beat a hasty back to be an informant. I had other sim-
Rerebaws aid. Only the living mem- retreat. Unfortunately, one of the arrows ilar experiences in different villages, but
bers of the nuclear families turned out to struck and killed a woman, an accident. I was always fortunate in that the dead
be accurate; the deceased ancestors were For that reason, her villages raiders de- person had been dead for some time, or
mostly fabrications. liberately sought out and killed a woman was not very closely related to the indi-
Discouraging as it was to have to re- in retaliationwhose name was on my vidual into whose ear I whispered the
check everything all over again, it was a list. My reason for going to the village forbidden name. I was usually cautioned
major turning point in my fieldwork. was to update my census data on a name- by one of the men to desist from saying
Thereafter, I began taking advantage of by-name basis and estimate the ages of any more names lest I get people an-
local arguments and animosities in se- all the residents. I knew I had the name gry.7
lecting my informants, and used more of the dead woman in my list, but nobody
extensively informants who had married would dare to utter her name so I could Kaobaw: The Bisaasi-teri
into the village in the recent past. I also remove it. I knew that I would be in very Headman Volunteers to Help Me
began traveling more regularly to other serious trouble if I got to the village and I had been working on the genealogies
villages at this time to check on genealo- said her name aloud, and I desperately for nearly a year when another individual
gies, seeking out villages whose mem- wanted to remove it from my list. I called came to my aid. It was Kaobaw, the
bers were on strained terms with the on one of my regular and usually cooper- headman of Upper Bisaasi-teri. The vil-
people about whom I wanted informa- ative informants and asked him to tell me lage of Bisaasi-teri was split into two
tion. I would then return to my base in the womans name. He refused ada- components, each with its own garden

9
ANNUAL EDITIONS

and own circular house. Both were in clandestinely, giving me a report the next keeping track of work and pay. They
sight of each other. However, the inten- day, telling me who revealed the new in- would both spend hours talking with me,
sity and frequency of internal bickering formation and whether or not he thought leaving without asking for anything.
and argumentation was so high that they they were in a position to know it. With When they wanted something, they
decided to split into two separate groups the information provided by Kaobaw would ask for it no matter what the rela-
but remain close to each other for protec- and Rerebaw, I made enormous gains in tive balance of reciprocity between us
tion in case they were raided. One group understanding village interrelationships might have been at that point.
was downstream from the other; I refer based on common ancestors and political For many of the customary things
to that group as the Lower Bisaasi-teri histories and became lifelong friends that anthropologists try to communi-
and call Kaobaws group Upper (up- with both. And both men knew that I had cate about another culture, these two
stream) Bisaasi-teri, a convenience they to learn about his recently deceased kin men and their families might be consid-
themselves adopted after separating from the other one. It was one of those ered to be exemplary or typical. For
from each other. I spent most of my time quiet understandings we all had but none other things, they are exceptional in
with the members of Kaobaws group, of us could mention. many regards, but the reader will, even
some 200 people when I first arrived Once again I went over the geneal- knowing some of the exceptions, un-
there. I did not have much contact with ogies with Kaobaw to recheck them, derstand Yanomam culture more inti-
Kaobaw during the early months of my a considerable task by this time. They mately by being familiar with a few
work. He was a somewhat retiring, quiet included about two thousand names, examples.
man, and among the Yanomam, the representing several generations of in- Kaobaw was about 40 years old
outsider has little time to notice the rare dividuals from four different villages. when I first came to his village in 1964. I
quiet ones when most everyone else is in Rerebaws information was very ac- say about 40 because the Yanomam
the front row, pushing and demanding at- curate, and Kaobaws contribution numeration system has only three num-
tention. He showed up at my hut one day enabled me to trace the genealogies bers: one, two, and more-than-two. It is
after all the others had left. He had come further back in time. Thus, after nearly hard to give accurate ages or dates for
to volunteer to help me with the geneal- a year of intensive effort on genealogies, events when the informants have no
ogies. He was poor, he explained, and Yanomam demographic patterns and means in their language to reveal such
needed a machete. He would work only social organization began to make a detail. Kaobaw is the headman of his
on the condition that I did not ask him good deal of sense to me. Only at this village, meaning that he has somewhat
about his own parents and other very point did the patterns through time begin more responsibility in political dealings
close kinsmen who had died. He also to emerge in the data, and I could begin with other Yanomam groups, and very
added that he would not lie to me as the to understand how kinship groups took little control over those who live in his
others had done in the past. form, exchanged women in marriage group except when the village is being
This was perhaps the single most im- over several generations, and only then raided by enemies. We will learn more
portant event in my first 15 months of did the fissioning of larger villages into about political leadership and warfare in
field research, for out of this fortuitous smaller ones emerge as a chronic and im- a later chapter, but most of the time men
circumstance evolved a very warm portant feature of Yanomam social, po- like Kaobaw are like the North Ameri-
friendship, and among the many things litical, demographic, economic, and can Indian chief whose authority was
following from it was a wealth of accu- ecological adaptation. At this point I was characterized in the following fashion:
rate information on the political history able to begin formulating more sophisti- One word from the chief, and each man
of Kaobaws village and related vil- cated questions, for there was now a pat- does as he pleases. There are different
lages, highly detailed genealogical infor- tern to work from and one to flesh out. styles of political leadership among the
mation, sincere and useful advice to me, Without the help of Rerebaw and Yanomam. Some leaders are mild,
and hundreds of valuable insights into Kaobaw it would have taken much quiet, inconspicuous most of the time,
the Yanomam way of life. Kaobaws longer to make sense of the plethora of but intensely competent. They act parsi-
familiarity with his groups history and details I had collected from not only moniously, but when they do, people lis-
his candidness were remarkable. His them, but dozens of other informants as ten and conform. Other men are more
knowledge of details was almost ency- well. tyrannical, despotic, pushy, flamboyant,
clopedic, his memory almost photo- I spent a good deal of time with these and unpleasant to all around them. They
graphic. More than that, he was two men and their families, and got to shout orders frequently, are prone to beat
enthusiastic about making sure I learned know them much better than I knew most their wives, or pick on weaker men.
the truth, and he encouraged me, indeed, Yanomam. They frequently gave their Some are very violent. I have met head-
demanded that I learn all details I might information in a way which related men who run the entire spectrum be-
otherwise have ignored. If there were themselves to the topic under discussion. tween these polar types, for I have
subtle details he could not recite on the We became warm friends as time passed, visited some 60 Yanomam villages.
spot, he would advise me to wait until he and the formal informant/anthropolo- Kaobaw stands at the mild, quietly
could check things out with someone gist relationship faded into the back- competent end of the spectrum. He has
else in the village. He would often do this ground. Eventually, we simply stopped had six wives thus farand temporary

10
Article 1. Doing Fieldwork among the Yanomamo

affairs with as many more, at least one of way at his age, for he established his rep- he has too many competent brothers in his
which resulted in a child that is publicly utation for being forthright and as fierce own village to expect to move easily into
acknowledged as his child. When I first as the situation required when he was the leadership position there.
met him he had just two wives: Bahimi younger, and the other men respect him. He does not intend to stay in
and Koamashima. Bahimi had two living He also has five mature brothers or half- Kaobaws group and refuses to make
children when I first met her; many oth- brothers in his village, men he can count his own gardena commitment that
ers had died. She was the older and en- on for support. He also has several other would reveal something of an intended
during wife, as much a friend to him as a mature brothers (parallel cousins, long-term residence. He feels that he has
mate. Their relationship was as close to whom he must refer to as brothers in adequately discharged his obligations to
what we think of as love in our culture his kinship system) in the village who his wifes parents by providing them
as I have seen among the Yanomam. frequently come to his aid, but not as of- with fresh game, which he has done for
His second wife was a girl of about 20 ten as his real brothers do. Kaobaw several years. They should let him take
years, Koamashima. She had a new baby has also given a number of his sisters to his wife and return to his own village
boy when I first met her, her first child. other men in the village and has prom- with her, but they refuse and try to entice
There was speculation that Kaobaw ised his young (8-year-old) daughter in him to remain permanently in Bisaasi-
was planning to give Koamashima to one marriage to a young man who, for that teri to continue to provide them with
of his younger brothers who had no wife; reason, is obliged to help him. In short, game when they are old. It is for this rea-
he occasionally allows his younger his natural or kinship following is son that they promised to give him their
brother to have sex with Koamashima, large, and partially because of this sup- second daughter, their only other child,
but only if he asks in advance. Kaobaw port, he does not have to display his ag- in marriage. Unfortunately, the girl was
gave another wife to one of his other gressiveness to remind his peers of his opposed to the marriage and ultimately
brothers because she was beshi position. married another man, a rare instance
(horny). In fact, this earlier wife had Rerebaw is a very different kind of where the woman in the marriage had
been married to two other men, both of person. He is much youngerperhaps in this much influence on the choice of her
whom discarded her because of her infi- his early twenties. He has just one wife, but husband.
delity. Kaobaw had one daughter by they have already had three children. He is Although Rerebaw has displayed his
her. However, the girl is being raised by from a village called Karohi-teri, located ferocity in many ways, one incident in
Kaobaws brother, though acknowl- about five hours walk up the Orinoco, particular illustrates what his character
edged to be Kaobaws child. slightly inland off to the east of the river it- can be like. Before he left his own village
Bahimi, his oldest wife, is about five self. Kaobaws village enjoys amicable to take his new wife in Bisaasi-teri, he
years younger than he. She is his cross- relationships with Rerebaws, and it is for had an affair with the wife of an older
cousinhis mothers brothers daugh- this reason that marriage alliances of the brother. When it was discovered, his
ter. Ideally, all Yanomam men should kind represented by Rerebaws marriage brother attacked him with a club. Re-
marry a cross-cousin. Bahimi was into Kaobaws village occur between the rebaw responded furiously: He grabbed
pregnant when I began my field work, two groups. Rerebaw told me that he an ax and drove his brother out of the vil-
but she destroyed the infant when it was came to Bisaasi-teri because there were no lage after soundly beating him with the
borna boy in this caseexplaining eligible women from him to marry in his blunt side of the single-bit ax. His
tearfully that she had no choice. The new own village, a fact that I later was able to brother was so intimidated by the thrash-
baby would have competed for milk with document when I did a census of his vil- ing and promise of more to come that he
Ariwari, her youngest child, who was lage and a preliminary analysis of its social did not return to the village for several
still nursing. Rather than expose Ariwari organization. Rerebaw is perhaps more days. I visited this village with Kabaw
to the dangers and uncertainty of an early typical than Kaobaw in the sense that he is shortly after this event had taken place;
weaning, she chose to terminate the new- chronically concerned about his personal Rerebaw was with me as my guide. He
born instead. By Yanomam standards, reputation for aggressiveness and goes out made it a point to introduce me to this
this has been a very warm, enduring mar- of his way to be noticed, even if he has to man. He approached his hammock,
riage. Kaobaw claims he beats Bahimi act tough. He gave me a hard time during grabbed him by the wrist, and dragged
only once in a while, and only lightly my early months of fieldwork, intimidat- him out on the ground: This is the
and she, for her part, never has affairs ing, teasing, and insulting me frequently. brother whose wife I screwed when he
with other men. He is, however, much braver than the other wasnt around! A deadly insult, one that
Kaobaw is a quiet, intense, wise, and men his age and is quite prepared to back would usually provoke a bloody club
unobtrusive man. It came as something up his threats with immediate actionas in fight among more valiant Yanomam.
of a surprise to me when I learned that he the club fight incident just described The man did nothing. He slunk sheep-
was the headman of his village, for he above. Moreover, he is fascinated with po- ishly back into his hammock, shamed,
stayed at the sidelines while others litical relationships and knows the details but relieved to have Rerebaw release
would surround me and press their de- of intervillage relationships over a large his grip.
mands on me. He leads more by example area of the tribe. In this respect he shows all Even though Rerebaw is fierce and
than by coercion. He can afford to be this the attributes of being a headman, although capable of considerable nastiness, he has

11
ANNUAL EDITIONS

a charming, witty side as well. He has a like Rerebaw than like Kaobaw , or at what has now turned into a lifelong
biting sense of humor and can entertain least try to be. . study.
the group for hours with jokes and clever 3. See Spindler (1970) for a general dis-
cussion of field research by anthropolo-
manipulations of language. And, he is NOTES gists who have worked in other cultures.
one of few Yanomam that I feel I can Nancy Howell has recently written a
trust. I recall indelibly my return to 1. The word Yanomam is nasalized very useful book (1990) on some of the
Bisaasi-teri after being away a yearthe through its entire length, indicated by medical, personal, and environmental
the diacritical mark ,. When this hazards of doing field research, which
occasion of my second field trip to the mark appears on any Yanomam word, includes a selected bibliography on
Yanomam. When I reached Bisaasi- the whole word is nasalized. The other fieldwork programs.
teri, Rerebaw was in his own village vowel represents a sound that does 4. They could not pronounce Chagnon.
visiting his kinsmen. Word reached him not occur in the English language. It is It sounded to them like their name for a
that I had returned, and he paddled similar to the umlaut in the German pesky bee, shaki, and that is what they
language or the oe equivalent, as in called me: pesky, noisome bee.
downstream immediately to see me. He the poet Goethes name. Unfortu- 5. The Yanomam in this region acquired
greeted me with an immense bear hug nately, many presses and typesetters canoes very recently. The missionaries
and exclaimed, with tears welling up in simply eliminate diacritical marks, and would purchase them from the Yekwana
his eyes, Shaki! Why did you stay away this has led to multiple spellings of the Indians to the north for money, and then
so long? Did you not know that my will word Yanomamand multiple mis- trade them to the Yanomam in ex-
pronunciations. Some anthropologists change for labor, produce, or informant
was so cold while you were gone that I have chosen to introduce a slightly dif- work in translating. It should be empha-
could not at times eat for want of seeing ferent spelling of the word Yanomam sized that those Yanomam who lived on
you again? I, too, felt the same way since I began writing about them, such as navigable portions of the Upper Orinoco
about himthen, and now. Yanomami, leading to additional mis- River moved there recently from the deep
Of all the Yanomam I know, he is spellings as their diacriticals are charac- forest in order to have contact with the
teristically eliminated by presses, and to missionaries and acquire the trade goods
the most genuine and the most devoted to the incorrect pronunciation Yanoma- the missionaries (and their supply sys-
his cultures ways and values. I admire meee. Vowels indicated as are pro- tem) brought.
him for that, although I cannot say that I nounced as the uh sound in the word 6. Rarely were there actual brothers or sis-
subscribe to or endorse some of these duck. Thus, the name Kaobaw would ters. In Yanomam kinship classifica-
values. By contrast, Kaobaw is older be pronounced cow-ba-wuh, but en- tions, certain kinds of cousins are
tirely nasalized. classified as siblings. See Chapter 4.
and wiser, a polished diplomat. He sees
2. I spent a total of 60 months among the 7. Over time, as I became more and more
his own culture in a slightly different Yanomam between 1964 and 1991. accepted by the Yanomam, they be-
light and seems even to question aspects The first edition of this case study was came less and less concerned about my
of it. Thus, while many of his peers en- based on the first 15 months I spent genealogical inquiries and now, provide
thusiastically accept the explanations among them in Venezuela. I have, at the me with this information quite willingly
of things given in myths, he occasionally time of this writing, made 20 field trips because I have been very discrete with
to the Yanomam and this edition re- it. Now, when I revisit familiar villages
reflects on themeven laughing at some flects the new information and under- I am called aside by someone who whis-
of the most preposterous of them. standings I have acquired over the years. pers to me things like, Dont ask about
Probably more of the Yanomam are I plan to return regularly to continue so-and-sos father.

Excerpted from Doing Fieldwork among the Yanomam from Yanomam: The Fierce People by Napolean A. Chagnon, 1992, Fourth Edition, pp.
531. 1992 by Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. Reprinted by permission.

12

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