One of the few ethnographic films in which the anthropologist appears as one of the subjects - a lively introduction to the nature of fieldwork. Napoleon Chagnon, who lived among the Yanomamo for 36 months over a period of eight years, is shown in various roles as "fieldworker": entering a village armed with arrows and adorned with feathers; sharing coffee with the shaman Dedeheiwa who recounts the myth of fire; dispensing eyedrops to a baby and accepting in turn a shaman's cure for his own illness; collecting voluminous genealogies; making tapes, maps, Polaroid photos; and attempting to analyze such patterns as Yąnomamö village fission, migration, and aggression.
Release Date | September 7, 1974 | |
---|---|---|
Status | Released | |
Original Title | A Man Called "Bee" | |
Runtime | 44min | |
Budget | — | |
Revenue | — | |
Language | English | |
Original Language | English | |
Production Countries | Brazil, United States of America | |
Production Companies |