Margaret Mead

Margaret Mead A Twentieth-Century Faith - Spiritual Lives

Hardback (14 Jan 2021)

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Publisher's Synopsis

For 50 years, Margaret Mead told Americans how cultures worked, and Americans listened. While serving as a curator at the American Museum of Natural History and as a professor of anthropology at Columbia University, she published dozens of books and hundreds of articles, scholarly and popular, on topics ranging from adolescence to atomic energy, Polynesian kinship networks to kindergarten, national morale to marijuana. At her death in 1978, she was the most famous anthropologist in the world and one of the best-known women in America. She had amply achieved her goal, as she described it to an interviewer in 1975, "To have lived long enough to be of some use." As befits her prominence, Mead has had many biographers, but there is a curious hole at the center of these accounts: Mead's faith. Margaret Mead: A Twentieth-Century Faith introduces a side of its subject that few people know. It re-narrates her life and reinterprets her work, highlighting religious concerns. Following Mead's lead, it ranges across areas that are typically kept academically distinct: anthropology, gender studies, intellectual history, church history, and theology. It is a portrait of a mind at work, pursuing a unique vision of the good of the world.

Book information

ISBN: 9780198834939
Publisher: OUP OXFORD
Imprint: Oxford University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 301.092
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: x, 218
Weight: 362g
Height: 137mm
Width: 204mm
Spine width: 23mm