When Boas began practicing anthropology in the 1880s, after abandoning physics, Western societies generally embraced a hierarchical classification of races and the notion of race and gender as biologically fixed. Thanks to Boas and his circle, anthropologists today reject the belief that social development is linear, moving from “primitive societies” to “civilized ones.”
The book is a well written portrait of Boas and some of the diverse women he
helped train at Columbia University, King suggests that they
transformed anthropology—and Western thought more broadly—by unmooring
cultural differences from biology, viewing cultures holistically, and
according equal value to non-Western societies. Boas’ students were Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, Zora Neale
Hurston, and Ella Cara Deloria. Each one contributed groundbreaking
anthropological research. While Mead may be Boas’ most celebrated
student, Benedict was Boas’ chief acolyte, and successful in her own right . Hurston became the Harlem Renaissance’s star contrarian,
whose novels
were rooted in her anthropological fieldwork. Deloria, of Yankton Dakota
Sioux and European descent, was able to be both a scientist and a native of the culture. They seem very modern in their thinking, which reflects how much they changed views from then to now.
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