Stoll's work among the native Mayas in the Guatemalan highlands led to two books:
Between Two Armies in the Ixil Towns of Guatemala (1994) and
Rigoberta Menchú and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans (1999). There Stoll argued that, contrary to the view then prevalent among foreign observers, the native population of rural Guatemala was never deeply or broadly committed to the leftist guerrillas' armed struggle against the Guatemalan state. According to Stoll, with the brutal
counterinsurgency launched in the early 1980s by the
Guatemalan Army, the Ixils found themselves "caught between two fires", with the guerrillas on one side and the army on the other. Stoll joined the faculty at
Middlebury College's Department of Anthropology in 1997.
Rigoberta Menchú controversy In
Rigoberta Menchú and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans, David Stoll claimed that the life story of Guatemalan
Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Rigoberta Menchú, as she had told it to anthropologist
Elizabeth Burgos in 1982 and as it was recounted in the book
I, Rigoberta Menchú (published by Burgos in 1983), was not entirely consistent with the testimonies of her neighbors and relatives or with the documentary evidence. Stoll's book attracted a great deal of attention and controversy upon its release. Other critics generally accepted the factual evidence about Menchú's life offered by Stoll, but questioned his interpretations and argued that he had failed to recognize that Menchú's
testimonio was part of a cultural tradition that legitimately incorporated communal experiences into an individual voice. Stoll's
Rigoberta Menchú and the Story of All Poor Guatemalans was re-issued in 2008 in an extended edition with a new foreword by Elizabeth Burgos. According to Mark Horowitz, William Yaworsky, and Kenneth Kickham, the controversy over Stoll's book on Menchú is one of the three most divisive events in the history of anthropology in the United States, along with controversies about the truthfulness of
Margaret Mead's
Coming of Age in Samoa and
Napoleon Chagnon's representation of violence among the
Yanomami.
Later work Stoll continues to carry out research in the Guatemalan highlands. He has recently focused on
immigration,
microcredit, and what he argues is a
financial bubble created by the two elements. ==Books==