A Man Called 'Bee': Studying the Yanomamo Filming Locations

A Man Called 'Bee': Studying the Yanomamo filming locations

Where was A Man Called 'Bee': Studying the Yanomamo filmed? A Man Called 'Bee': Studying the Yanomamo was filmed in 1 locations across Brazil in the following places:

A Man Called 'Bee': Studying the Yanomamo Filming Locations

A Man Called 'Bee': Studying the Yanomamo (1974)
Runtime: 40 minutes
Rating:
Release year: 1974
Plot summary

This is one of the few ethnographic films in which the anthropologist appears as one of the subjects, and as such it is a lively introduction to the nature of fieldwork. Napoleon Chagnon, who lived among the Yanomamö 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 village fission, migration, and aggression. The commentary touches on the problems of the fieldworker (all the genealogies compiled in the first year were based on false data, and had to be discarded). Between the image and the commentary we also glimpse some of the ambiguities of the anthropologist's role and his relation to the subjects of his study, for example in the tension between mutual exploitation and reciprocity. The film complements Chagnon's book on his fieldwork, Studying the Yanomamö.

Genres
Documentary
Short
Cast
Napoleon A. Chagnon
Directors
Timothy Asch
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A Man Called 'Bee': Studying the Yanomamo filming locations