>>24613156
The travels of Hans Staden in Brazil in 1557 as well as the film - How tasty was my little Frenchman? are perfect answer to your question and I really hope I get you interested enough to seek them out.

In this incident, the European was the foreign mercenary who came to America when the natives were divided between protestant french forces headed by subjects of John Calvin and the more militaristic forces of Portugal. The french mercenary after being taken in by the ‘savages’ grows acquainted to their culture before being overwhelmed by it. He had a tribal wife who loved him and he befriended the chief by helping defeat their enemy, the Tupiniquins. He was under the “European” assumption that fighting valiantly for the natives and being loved by the woman would allow them to work with him and let him go free but NO! These events, in this culture he is now subsumed under only lead to his demise as his great prowess in battle makes him target for cannibalism so as to give the chief his powers, likewise his wife wants him to die as their love under these customs would mean killing and eating her husband the most honorable form of love imaginable, an idea totally horrendous and absurd to European Christians. Only at the last moment does the Frenchman become totally subsumed in this new culture which overtook him and realize his gruesome mistake that what he thought would set him free (acting honorably in Christian standards) only makes him target for death in this foreign world.

Please read this blog analyzing the film and travel book

https://hollywoodandhistory.wordpress.com/tag/how-tasty-was-my-little-frenchman-film-1971/

>The best portrayal of this prejudice and misconstruction of native culture is Staden’s representation of women. The Frenchmen finally realizes his role as a husband, physically and mentally, when his wife shoots him with an arrow to prevent him from escaping. This scene in the film makes his wife look like the worst culprit of his demise. Staden’s and other European publishing’s of native women depict them in the same light; “the females are represented in both prose and illustration as the most savage of the savages.”[11] Sexual antagonism is a stereotypical representation of women in a male-dominated society. Europeans depicted women and children as being inherently inferior and uncultured.
>Dos Santos does not inherently portray women as “most savage of the savages”, but rather as more concerned with an honorable death that would provide nourishment for her tribe. The Frenchmen fails to understand their “love” and makes another mistake by thinking in terms of European manners of love, promising to take her to Europe and show her a world she has never seen and giving her a “better” life. However, she thinks in a different manner, which involves eating her brave, valiant warrior. Santos depiction of their love story demonstrates the failure of the Europeans and their inability to