Article
“Why did they die?”: biomedical narratives of epidemics and mortality among amazonian indigenous populations in sociohistorical and anthropological contexts
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SANTOS, Ricardo Ventura; COIMBRA JUNIOR, Carlos Everaldo Alvares; RADIN, Joanna. “Why did they die?”: biomedical narratives of epidemics and mortality among amazonian indigenous populations in sociohistorical and anthropological contexts. Current Anthropology, v. 61, n. 4, p. 1-30, Aug. 2020.
Author
Santos, Ricardo Ventura
Coimbra Junior, Carlos Everaldo Alvares
Radin, Joanna
Abstract
Texto multi e interdisciplinar, que resulta de mais de 10 anos de uma pesquisa colaborativa conduzida por Ricardo Ventura Santos (ENSP/Fiocruz e Museu Nacional/ UFRJ), Carlos Coimbra Jr. (ENSP) e Joanna Radian (Yale University). Santos e Coimbra são investigadores ligados ao Grupo de Pesquisa sobre Saúde dos Povos Indígenas da ENSP/Fiocruz e ao Grupo de Trabalho sobre Saúde Indígena da Associação Brasileira de Saúde Coletiva (Abrasco). Abordando desde os primórdios dos testes da vacina contra o sarampo nos anos 1960, o trabalho analisa e contextualiza narrativas da biomedicina sobre a vulnerabilidade dos povos indígenas frente às doenças infecciosas ao longo de meio século. In the second half of the twentieth century, Indigenous populations from different parts of the world were identified as key subjects in a wide range of investigations into patterns of human biological variation. Focusing on Amazonia, a prominent region for such research, this paper explores some of the complex relationships between biomedicine, anthropological knowledge, political regimes, and Indigenous rights. We focus on the roles of Francis L. Black (Yale University) and James V. Neel (University of Michigan), leading American scientists working in lowland South America from the 1970s to the 1990s, in knowledge production and scientific disputes at the intersection of human biology and susceptibility to infectious diseases, as well as the use of specific biomedical technologies (e.g., vaccines). During the Cold War, arguments concerning genetically determined susceptibility to infectious diseases and the role of biomedicine in health care for Indigenous populations became highly disputed, as scientists were concerned about how scientific knowledge could be used in the implementation of public policies. We argue that analysis of unpublished debates about the political implications of the trajectory of biomedical research about Amazonian Indigenous peoples helps to broaden and complexify the global history of human biological diversity research in the post–World War II period.