Friday Five: Leading Digital Ethnographers | Edelman Digital - 0 views
Dr. Kim Hill on Darkness in El Dorado - 0 views
-
"Darkness in El Dorado".
-
"Darkness in El Dorado".
-
I have been motivated to write this document because of Sponsel's attempt to censor my viewpoint from the debate about the value of the book. I have worked with South American Indians for 23 years and have done nearly 120 months of fieldwork with remote Indian tribes.
Darkness in El Dorado Controversy : SAGE Knowledge - 1 views
-
Five years after its publication, this unprecedented controversy was still rife with debate and far from settled. Moreover, it goes to the very heart of anthropology, with broad implications for every anthropologist. Primarily, it is a matter of professional ethics and more generally, of values. Values have been a sincere concern of various practitioners of anthropology since its beginnings about 150 years ago. For example, many anthropologists have demonstrated their humanitarian commitment through advocacy work in promoting the survival, welfare, and rights of indigenous societies struggling under the pressures of Western colonialism and the genocide, ethnocide, and ecocide often associated with it.
JSTOR: Current Anthropology, Vol. 43, No. 1 (February 2002), pp. 149-152 - 0 views
-
Tierney served our profession with a sorely needed wakeup call unprecedented in its effectiveness, whatever the negative consequences that inevitably accompany controversies and scandals and to whatever degree his numerous and diverse allegations prove true.
-
Tierney exposed the ugliest affair in the entire history of anthropology. It cannot be summarily dismissed by a vocal minority as simply a matter of personal animosities, turf war, postmodernist critique of science or scientism, objectivist versus activist, differing interpretations of Yanomami aggression, sensationalist or tabloid journalism, etc. As Susan Lindee recognizes and contrary to Raymond Hames, not all of the fundamental claims made by Tierney have been discussed, let alone refuted.
-
the Pandoras box opened by Tierney should be examined and debated within the framework of the ethics and politics of knowledge production in the West, and that includes professional, ethical, and moral responsibility toward the communities who host research. The three basic questions I raised at the open forum on this controversy at the last AAA convention remain: What have the Yanomami contributed to us? What have we contributed to the Yanomami, for better and for worse? How are professional ethics and human rights involved?
El Dorado Interim Report/Request for Information - 1 views
-
El Dorado Task Force
-
activities that may have resulted in personal gain to scientists, anthropologists and journalists while contributing harm to the Yanomami
-
activities by anthropologists, scientists and journalists that may have contributed to malnutrition, disease and disorganization
- ...8 more annotations...
Napoleon Chagnon Elected to the National Academy of Sciences - 0 views
-
His election not only vindicates Chagnon of unfounded accusations that have undermined his reputation and career, but is an achievement that reflects well upon our discipline.
-
highest honors bestowed upon a US scientist.
-
complex nature of humans as alternately cruel and kind, both warlike and peaceable
- ...4 more annotations...
Napoleon Chagnon, Anthropologist, Discusses His Dramatic Career from Northern Michigan - 1 views
-
Yanomamö: The Fierce People
-
1968 University of Michigan medical expedition
-
Chagnon
- ...13 more annotations...
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=3&ved=0CEAQFjAC&url=http%3... - 2 views
-
a devastating measles epidemic broke out "coincident with," to use Neel's phrasing, his arrival in the field in 1968. Neel indicated he had brought two thousand doses of measles vaccine and had planned to hand these over to mis- sionaries in the region. But faced with the epidemic, Neel and his team vaccinated many Yanomami as well. Here is how Neel described his actions: "Much of our carefully designed protocol for that expedition was quickly scrapped as we dashed from village to village, organizing the missionaries, ourselves doing our share of immunizations but also treatment when we reached villages to which measles had preceded us. We always carried a gross, almost ridiculous excess of antibi- otics - now we needed everything we had, and radioed for more" (1994:162). To what degree this description accurately reflects Neel's actions during the epidemic is one of the critical questions in the controversy. Tierney accused Neel of wors- ening the measles epidemic through his actions; others have suggested Neel could have done more than he did to save Yanomami lives during the epidemic.
Anthropological Niche of Douglas W. Hume - Biographies - 2 views
-
Timothy Asch, Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Center for Visual Anthropology at the University of Southern California
-
While studying at Columbia University, he worked as a teaching assistant for Margaret Mead who got him interested in the potential use of visual media for instruction. He was intrigued by this field, and that’s probably why he made this his life long passion and career.
-
Napoleon Chagnon is a Professor of Sociobiology at the University of California, Santa Barbara
- ...3 more annotations...
Response to Allegations against James V. Neel in Darkness in El Dorado, by Patrick Tierney - 3 views
-
The most serious charge accuses Neel of deliberately initiating a 1968 measles epidemic among the Yanomami by using a hazardous and contraindicated vaccine to test theories about human evolution, “leadership genes,” and infectious diseases.
-
Various other allegations against Neel in Tierney’s book include the following:1.That he failed to provide medical care to the Yanomami during the measles epidemic.2.That the Yanomami population-genetics studies directed by Neel were performed as controls for comparison with work on mutation detection among the survivors of the atomic bombing in Japan.3.That Neel performed unethical experiments on the Yanomami, involving radioactive iodine injections.4.That he sought to demonstrate the existence of a “leadership gene” among the Yanomami headmen.5.That Neel was somehow involved in administering plutonium injections into patients in the Rochester hospital where he was a medical house officer in the 1940s.6.That he discounted the risks of atomic radiation.7.That Neel denounced modern American society and advocated improving the human race by principles of coercive eugenics.
The Yanomami Scandal - 0 views
-
His accusations against Chagnon also implicate him in the epidemic, arguing that he administered a counter-indicated vaccine on Neel's instructions; but Tierney's major charges are different and various. He claims that Chagnon interfered massively with the lives of the Yanomami in all sorts of ways.
-
The charges that James Neel induced a measles epidemic among the Yanomami or at least treated them like guinea pigs to be studies while the epidemic ran its course have been disputed by medical experts and others who know about Neel’s research. If these charges are without merit, as now seems probable, then the only accusations remaining against Neel depend on innuendo and guilt by association. In the final chapter of his book Tierney retells the disgraceful story of how American doctors experimented on unwitting subjects in the USA whom they referred to in their files as "human products."
-
"The New Yorker have created a furor, Patrick Tierney, an investigative journalist, has accused both Neel and Chagnon of committing serious abuses against the Yanomami. He charges Neel with instigation of, or at the very least doing little or nothing to deal with, the serious measles epidemic among the Yanomami that resulted in thousands of deaths. "
Darkness in El Dorado by Patrick Tierney: A case of highly selective investigative jour... - 1 views
-
Darkness in El Dorado, by Patrick Tierney is filled with a series of accusations ranging from misconduct, unprofessional conduct, to downright illegal and immoral acts
-
book is also impressively documented
-
However, when specific sources relied upon by Tierney are compared with the way Tierney uses them, a very different pattern emerges: one of highly selective use of sources in ways that support Tierney's main arguments and the omission of much more substantive materials which contradict him.
- ...2 more annotations...
Kenan Malik's review of 'Darkness in El Dorado' by Patrick Tierney - 0 views
-
In the twentieth century, the consequences of racial science led anthropologists to reject naturalistic explanations and to see human behaviour as dictated largely by culture, not biology
-
all too often anthropologists saw what they wanted to
-
The most prominent of the new generation of sociobiological anthropologists was the American Napoleon Chagnon
- ...21 more annotations...
-
I find this article interesting because it not only describes Tierney's point of view of Chagnon in 'Darkness in El Dorado' but it questions Tierney's own credibility of accusing Chagnon for such outrageous crimes. It describes his reasoning behind all his claims but also points out the last of factual evidence he presents with them.
Darkness in El Dorado - 1 views
-
expedition leaders Napoleon Chagnon and Charles Brewer Carías
-
claimed first contact with 3,500 Yanomami Indians
-
Yanomami villages they say had never been visited before by anyone except other tribal members" set off a frenzy of media competition
- ...17 more annotations...
-
This document illustrates many of the discrepencies between what the visitors and researchers claimed happened in the Yanomami villages while underscoring the actuality of the situation. Many of these tribes were devastated by the constant media attention they were getting. Even on the arrival of anyone to their village by helicopter, houses were destroyed, trees were uprooted, and villagers were injured. The article discusses Chagnons documentaries as well, describing how they were portrayed at the time as award-winning documentaries. Apparently Chagnons work rescued the Yanomami from the measles epidemic in the first film and 'showcased' their 'ferocity' in the second. The article then goes on to say how many of the Yanomami featured in his films died shortly after of some unknown illness and describes a scene where upon Chagnons return to the village he was assaulted with axes and was nearly killed.
Darkness in El Dorado by Patrick Tierney - 3 views
Concerning "Ritual among the Nacirema" - 12 views
« First
‹ Previous
41 - 58
Showing 20▼ items per page