The immediate reason for writing this article is the novel Nine Nights by the
Brazilian writer Bernardo Carvalho, and the subject is the thematization of
anthropological thanatography and suicidology on the example of writing
about the death of the forgotten anthropologist Buell Quain among the
Brazilian Indians. The story of his anthropological work and suicide, once a
taboo topic in the discipline, forms an integral part of a significant, but
lesser-known episode in the history of American and Brazilian anthropology
in the first half of the 20th century. The literary work in question is
treated as one of the heuristic sources for the reconstruction of Quaine?s
biography and ethnography and the anthropological-historical analysis of the
case, and not as an analytical subject in itself. The anthropological
understanding and interpretation of the ethnographer?s suicide in the field
includes a number of interrelated subjective and objective factors: the
idiosyncratic life history, the very nature and conditions of ethnographic
research, the actual condition of the studied Indian communities, and the
political climate in Brazil on the eve of World War II.