Napoleon Chagnon was a distinguished research professor at the University of Missouri, adjunct research scientist at the University of Michigan, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. He formerly taught at the University of California-Santa Barbara, Penn State, Northwestern, and the University of Michigan. He was the author of five previous academic books.
“One of history’s greatest anthropologists—and a rip-roaring
story-teller—recounts his life with an endangered Amazonian tribe
and the mind-boggling controversies his work ignited. Noble Savages
is rich with insights into human nature, and an entertaining
interlude with a remarkable man.”
*Steven Pinker, Harvard College Professor of Psychology, Harvard
University, and the author of The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why
Violence Has Declined*
“Noble Savages is an epic—not only of one of the most extraordinary
physical and intellectual adventures ever experienced by a major
scientist, but also the history of one of the most significant
events in the early, often turbulent meeting between evolutionary
biology and the social sciences."
*E. O. Wilson, Pellegrino University Professor Emeritus, Harvard
University, and the author of The Social Conquest of Earth and
Sociobiology*
“Very few people have led lives as fascinating as Napoleon
Chagnon’s, or have lived among people as dangerous as the Yanomamö,
and fewer still have his courage or his honor. Noble Savages is a
page-turning masterpiece. You don’t need to know anything about
anthropology to read it. By the time you finish, you’ll know a
lot."
*Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, author of The Old Way and The Harmless
People*
“Noble Savages is Napoleon Chagnon’s equal-time response to the
libels that were piled upon him by reckless journalists and
irresponsible colleagues. For those who followed the debate it is a
welcome summary, and for those who did not it is a brilliant
introduction to the innocent nobility of the fierce Yanomamö and
the petty savagery of the mean-minded savants who saw their outworn
ideologies under attack. Chagnon was always himself a fighter and
this book is his final knockout punch in a fight he didn’t pick,
but has most assuredly won.”
*Robin Fox, University Professor of Social Theory, Rutgers
University and author of The Tribal Imagination: Civilization and
the Savage Mind*
“A beautifully written adventure story. . . . Noble Savages is a
remarkable testament to an engineer's 35-year effort to unravel the
complex working of an untouched human society.”
*The New York Times*
“One of the most interesting anthropology books I have ever read. .
. . [Chagnon's] portrayal of society's origins has so much to say
about the nature of our species that it should be examined
thoughtfully.”
*The Wall Street Journal*
“Engaging. . . . A fascinating portrayal of the discomfort and
danger that anthropologists working in remote areas face. The book
is at its most entertaining when documenting the challenges of
everyday life in the jungle — how to sleep fitfully in a hammock
among enemies who might attempt to assassinate you in your sleep or
how to net a juicy tapir for your dinner.”
*Washington Post*
“This memoir, Chagnon’s first book for a general audience, recounts
with confident prose and self-effacing humor his intense immersion,
from 1964 onward, within this fascinating people and their jungle
environment. . . . In this invaluable book, Chagnon delivers a
gripping adventure travelogue. His take on the corrupting
relationship between politics and science is as likely to re-stoke
the flames of debate as settle outstanding accounts.”
*Publishers Weekly*
“Fascinating reading for anyone interested in native peoples,
history and where we all come from.”
*The Seattle Times*
“It’s not hyperbole to call Chagnon the most controversial and
famous anthropologist in America. . . . [Noble Savages] is a memoir
that offers a highly readable mixture of adventure, science, and
scandal.”
*Daily Beast*
“An important contribution to the debates over the methods and
theories used to understand humans in anthropology and evolutionary
sciences—and to debates over how visionaries become the targets of
those who do not share their vision.”
*Nature*
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