Don't Sleep, There Are Snakes (Paperback)

Author: Daniel L. Everett
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780307386120
Publisher: VINTA
Publish Date: 11/3/2009
Buy.com Sku: 211282234
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Dimensions (in Inches) 8.25H x 5.25L x 0.75T
 
A riveting account of the astonishing experiences and discoveries made by linguist Daniel Everett while he lived with the Piraha, a small tribe of Amazonian Indians in central Brazil.
Daniel Everett arrived among the Piraha with his wife and three young children hoping to convert the tribe to Christianity. Everett quickly became obsessed with their language and its cultural and linguistic implications. The Piraha have no counting system, no fixed terms for color, no concept of war, and no personal property. Everett was so impressed with their peaceful way of life that he eventually lost faith in the God he''d hoped to introduce to them, and instead devoted his life to the science of linguistics. Part passionate memoir, part scientific exploration, Everett''s life-changing tale is riveting look into the nature of language, thought, and life itself.
 
Annotation:
Throughout history, many missionaries have written memoirs about their struggles to bring religion to jungle-dwelling tribes, but Daniel L. Everett is one of the first to document a reverse conversion. In 1977, Everett was a Christian missionary who took his wife and children to live in the Amazon jungle with the indigenous Pirahã people in order to learn their language and translate the Bible into it. But Everett soon discovered that the Pirahãs have a lifestyle and a linguistic system unlike any other in the world. The Pirahãs are completely in tune with the inevitable transience of life and live every moment in the present. They have no system for counting, no terms for color, no myths or oral history, and their language violates certain grammatical rules which were thought to be universal. Everett became so obsessed with the benevolent lifestyle of the Pirahãs that he quit the Christian church which had sent him to the jungle in the first place, and stayed with the tribe even after his wife left him.

 
 

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Prologue

“Look! There he is, Xigagaí, the spirit.”
“Yes, I can see him. He is threatening us.”
“Everybody, come see Xigagaí. Quickly! He is on the beach!”

I roused from my deep sleep, not sure if I was dreaming or hearing this conversation. It was 6:30 on a Saturday morning in August, the dry season of 1980. The sun was shining, but not yet too hot. A breeze was blowing up from the Maici River in front of my modest hut in a clearing on the bank. I opened my eyes and saw the palm thatch above me, its original yellow graying from years of dust and soot. My dwelling was flanked by two smaller Pirahã huts of similar construction, where lived Xahoábisi, Kóhoibiíihíai, and their families.

Mornings among the Pirahãs, so many mornings, I picked up the faint smell of smoke drifting from their cook fires, and the warmth of the Brazilian sun on my face, its rays softened by my mosquito net. Chil
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