Quick Facts
- NAME: Margaret Mead
- OCCUPATION: Anthropologist
- BIRTH DATE: December 16, 1901
- DEATH DATE: November 15, 1978
- EDUCATION: Barnard College, Columbia University
- PLACE OF BIRTH: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- PLACE OF DEATH: New York, New York
Best Known For
Margaret Mead is best known for her studies and publications on cultural anthropology.
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Play NowMargaret Mead. (2013). The Biography Channel website. Retrieved 07:25, Jun 19, 2013, from http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056.
Margaret Mead. [Internet]. 2013. The Biography Channel website. Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056 [Accessed 19 Jun 2013].
"Margaret Mead." 2013. The Biography Channel website. Jun 19 2013, 07:25 http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056.
"Margaret Mead," The Biography Channel website, 2013, http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056 [accessed Jun 19, 2013].
"Margaret Mead," The Biography Channel website, http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056 (accessed Jun 19, 2013).
Margaret Mead [Internet]. The Biography Channel website; 2013 [cited 2013 Jun 19] Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056.
Margaret Mead, http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056 (last visited Jun 19, 2013).
Margaret Mead. The Biography Channel website. 2013. Available at: http://www.biography.com/people/margaret-mead-9404056. Accessed Jun 19, 2013.
Synopsis
Margaret Mead was born December 16, 1901 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Mead did her undergraduate work at Barnard College, where she met Franz Boas, who she went on to do her anthropology Ph.D. with at Columbia. She became a curator of ethnology at American Museum of Natural History, where she published the bestseller, Coming of Age in Samoa.
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A small group of thoughtful people could change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.
Profile
Cultural anthropologist and writer. Born on December 16, 1901, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Margaret Mead is credited with changing the way we study different human cultures. The daughter of a University of Pennsylvania economist and a feminist political activist, she graduated from Barnard College in 1923, where she met Franz Boas. Studying with Boas, Mead went on to get a Ph.D. at Columbia University in 1929.
Margaret Mead was appointed assistant curator of ethnology at the American Museum of Natural History in 1926. After expeditions to Samoa and New Guinea, she published Coming of Age in Samoa (1928)—which became a best seller— and Growing Up in New Guinea (1930). All together, she made 24 field trips among six South Pacific peoples.
Her later works included Male and Female (1949) and Growth and Culture (1951), in which Margaret Mead argued that personality characteristics, especially as they differ between men and women, were shaped by cultural conditioning rather than heredity. Some critics called her fieldwork impressionistic, but her writings have proved enduring and have made anthropology accessible to a wider public.
Over the years Margaret Mead became an in-demand lecturer, often tackling controversial social issues. She also wrote a column for Redbook magazine and was a popular interview subject on a wealth of topics. She continued to work for the American Museum of Natural History until 1969 and an adjunct professor at Columbia University for a time. In 1972, Mead published her autobiography, Blackberry Winter.
Married and divorced three times, Margaret Mead first wed Luther Cressman in 1923. The couple divorced in 1928. She then married Reo Fortune, but that union ended in 1935. The next year, Mead took her third husband, anthropologist Gregory Bateson. The couple sometimes collaborated in field research and had a child together, a daughter named Mary Catherine Bateson. The couple divorced in 1950.
Margaret Mead died on November 15, 1978, in New York City.
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