Industrialization In The Emerald Forest

456 Words2 Pages

The film “Emerald Forest,” depicts three Amazonian tribes (the Invisible People, the Fierce People, and the Bat People). Further, the film shows how the industrialization mechanisms of the modern society affect each tribe, especially economically. The dam project results in adverse cultural effects to each tribe's economic stability. The construction of the dam threatens the Invisible People, both immediately and in a subtler but more certain way in the long run. The dam has displaced the Fierce People, a tribe of savage cannibal, causing them to move into the hunting grounds of the Invisible People. Displacing the tribes food therefore displaces the tribes resources and sources of economic stability; basic human rights. Furthermore, this threat causes a shift in power between tribes. Moreover, the dam has provided power and an incentive to bring more modern …show more content…

He belongs there now. Then the father turns to the chief and asks him to order the boy to return with him. Furthermore, he would not be chief any longer if he told members of his tribe to do something that "they did not want to do." This admission gets to the very heart of the difference between "primitive" society and our own. In our society, it is normal for the state, employer, teachers and religious officials to order us around every day of our lives. The high price of civilization is repression. The "Fierce People" are bargaining with the white men who run the brothel. If they bring him Indian women whom he can prostitute, he will give them machine-guns in exchange that they can use against their enemies, including the "Invisible People." We eventually learn that the Bill Markham's crew has build a dam on the territory of the "Fierce People" and that their degraded behavior is one of the unforeseen consequences of