Subject 01: Exemplary Indigenous masculinity in Cold War genetics
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-1-2020
Abstract
In 1962 a team of scientists conducted their first joint fieldwork in a Xavante village in Central Brazil. Recycling long-standing notions that living Indigenous people represented human prehistory, the scientists saw Indigenous people as useful subjects of study not only due to their closeness to nature, but also due to their sociocultural and political realities. The geneticists' vision crystalized around one subject-the famous chief Apöwá. Through Apöwá, the geneticists fixated on what they perceived as the political prowess, impressive physique, and masculine reproductive aptitude of Xavante men. These constructions of charismatic masculinity came at the expense of recognizing how profoundly colonial expansion into Mato Grosso had destabilized Xavante communities, stripping them of their land and introducing epidemic disease. The geneticists' theorizing prefigured debates to come in sociobiology, and set up an enduring research programme that Apöwá continues to animate even four decades after his death.
Identifier
85091856751 (Scopus)
Publication Title
British Journal for the History of Science
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1017/S000708742000031X
e-ISSN
1474001X
ISSN
00070874
PubMed ID
32762777
First Page
311
Last Page
332
Issue
3
Volume
53
Fund Ref
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Recommended Citation
Dent, Rosanna, "Subject 01: Exemplary Indigenous masculinity in Cold War genetics" (2020). Faculty Publications. 5028.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/5028
