TY - BOOK AU - Trevisan-Bucaille,Monique AU - Bucaille,Richard TI - Tupinamba cannibalism, quasi-potlatch of human flesh and “total social fact” PY - 2020///. N1 - 47 N2 - Cannibalism, marked as infamy in the West, nevertheless proves to the historian as well as to the ethnographer a practice that has been everywhere widespread, with preferred homelands: South America, for instance. There, this practice organised so well many societies —for example, the Tupinamba of the Brazilian coast— that it appears as a “total social fact” (Mauss); still better, the excellent ethnography of the Tupinambas shows that like their conquerors, even the eaten prisoners conceived the ordinary anthropophagic “exchange” in the way of a « gift/for-gift,” even if it was agonistic. The result, far removed from our humanism, was a coherent and “syncretistic” ideology, establishing the human being as meat among others, between spirits and animals." UR - https://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-du-mauss-2020-1-page-69?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080 ER -