Artigo de Periódico
The Noble Enigma: Chagas' Nominations for the Nobel Prize
Fecha
1999Registro en:
0074-0276
v. 94
Autor
Coutinho, Marilia
Freire Junior, Olival
Dias, João Carlos Pinto
Coutinho, Marilia
Freire Junior, Olival
Dias, João Carlos Pinto
Institución
Resumen
Carlos Chagas, a Brazilian physician, discovered the American trypanosomiasis in 1909. Like other
remarkable discoveries of those days, his work helped to articulate the insect-vector theory and other
theoretical guidelines in tropical medicine. Unlike all other discoveries, all the stages of this work were
accomplished in a few months and by a single man. Chagas’ discovery was widely recognized at home
and abroad. He was twice nominated for the Nobel Prize – in 1913 and in 1921–, but never received the
award. Evidence suggests that the reasons for this failure are related to the violent opposition that
Chagas faced in Brazil. The contentions towards Chagas were related to a rejection of the meritocratic
procedures that gave him prominence, as well as to local petty politics.