From Library Journal
Through 180 photographs, noted anthropologist Levi-Strauss documents his ethnographic research among the peoples of Brazil from 1935 to 1939. The photographs, mostly of the people he studied and encountered, are beautifully reproduced and captioned. A 15-page prolog provides the context for the pictures and includes general comments on the changes that Levi-Strauss has observed in Brazil over the last 50 years. Although subtitled a memoir, the book does not introduce readers to the author's life's work or his philosophy of anthropology. As it is, the collection of photographs represents a time that will never be re-created, and like other collections of ethnographic materials, it stands as a record of the physical makeup, cultural traditions, and environment of the people it includes. Readers interested in the details of Levi-Strauss's research on Brazil should refer to his classic Tristes Tropiques (LJ 7/61). Recommended for general readers.
Joyce L. Ogburn, Yale Univ. Lib., New Haven, Ct.Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
In an attractively laid out and carefully printed 10-by-11-inch volume, the father of structural anthropology presents some 180 of the photographs he took during his 1935^-39 encounters with small tribal peoples living in Brazil's forests. He displays the pictures as though they traced a single excursion beginning in Sao Paulo, proceeding through his sojourns with the tribes, and concluding with the long return from the jungle by canoe, riverboat, and amphibian airplane. Introducing them, Levi-Strauss discusses the physical and cultural differences 60 years have wrought in the lives of the peoples he studied and also, more intriguingly, reminds us of his contention that these "primitive" peoples are the regressed survivors of more complex societies. A fascinating record of one of the twentieth-century's most significant social scientific enterprises.
Ray Olson