Darkness in El Dorado: How Scientists and Journalists Devastated the Amazon
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The explosive and highly controversial National Book Award finalist that has forever changed the discipline of anthropology.
Thought to be the last "virgin" people, the Yanomami were considered the most savage and warlike tribe on earth, as well as one of the most remote, secreted in the jungles and highlands of the Venezuelan and Brazilian rainforest. Preeminent anthropologists like Napoleon Chagnon and Jacques Lizot founded their careers in the 1960s by "discovering" the Yanomami's ferociou…
Thought to be the last "virgin" people, the Yanomami were considered the most savage and warlike tribe on earth, as well as one of the most remote, secreted in the jungles and highlands of the Venezuelan and Brazilian rainforest. Preeminent anthropologists like Napoleon Chagnon and Jacques Lizot founded their careers in the 1960s by "discovering" the Yanomami's ferociou…
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Social SciencesPrint BooksHistoryAwardsPaperbackNonfictionAnthropology & ArchaeologyNative American StudiesLatin American HistorySocial Sciences - General & MiscellaneousSocio-Cultural AnthropologyNative South American & Caribbean PeopleNative & Indigenous History - South America & CaribbeanAnthropologyPublic OpinionDiscrimination & PrejudiceNative South American & Caribbean Peoples - Anthropology & SociologyNative South American Peoples - HistorySocio-Cultural Anthropology - General & MiscellaneousNative South American & Caribbean Peoples - General & MiscellaneousAnthropology - Fieldwork & MethodologyPublic Opinion - History & Historical FiguresEthnic Conflict & GenocideYanomamo Indians->Social conditionsYanomamo Indians->Crimes againstIndians, Treatment of->Amazon River Region2000 National Book Awards->Nonfiction FinalistsPrevious Nonfiction Finalists - National Book AwardsNational Book Awards



