Margaret Mead in Samoa

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1999 (116):169-174 (1999)
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Abstract

In 1983, Harvard University Press published Derek Freeman's Margaret Mead And Samoa: The Making and Unmaking of an Anthropological Myth. Many anthropologists judged the book to be an unwarranted attack on the late Margaret Mead for the field work she did in 1925-26 for Coming of Age in Samoa, published in 1928. The implications from this now famous book served as evidence for a general liberal view of culture in America, resonated with the work of John Dewey as it became popular in the 1920's, and established Mead as an intellectual icon until her death in 1978. Freeman's first critique…

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