|
|
Julian Steward
Julian Haynes Steward (January 31, 1902 - February 6, 1972) was an American anthropologist best known for his role in the development of a scientific theory of cultural evolution in the years following WWII.
BiographySteward was born to a family of devout Christian Scientists in Washington, D.C.. His family were wealth member of Washington's civil service -- his father was the chief of the Board of Examiners of the patent office while his uncle was the chief forecaster for the U.S. Weather Bureau. Steward showed no particular interest in anthropology as a child, but at the age of sixteen he enrolled at Deep Springs, a remote prep school high in the south-eastern Sierra Nevadas designed to produce future political leaders. His experience of the high mountains and local Shoshone and Paiute peoples awakened an interest in life in this area. After spending a year at Berkeley, Steward transferred to Cornell. Cornell lacked an anthropology department, and he studied zoology and biology while the college's president, Livingston Farrand, continued to nurture his interest in anthropology. Steward earned his B.A. in 1925 and returned to Berkeley to pursue a Ph.D. in anthropology.
Berkeley in the 1920s was a center of anthropological thought. The discipline originated in the work of Franz Boas at Columbia University, and two of Boas's greatest students, Alfred Kroeber and Robert Lowie established the department at Berkeley. Along with Edward Gifford, they established Berkeley as a west-coast beachhead for the discipline. Steward proved to be a star student, and quickly earned a reputation as a scholar of great potential. He graduated in 1929 after completing a library thesis entitled The Ceremonial Buffoon of the American Indian, a Study of Ritualized Clowning and Role Reversals and went to teach at the University of Michigan, establishing an anthropology department there that would later become famous under the guidance of fellow evolutionist Leslie White. In 1930 he moved to the University of Utah, which was closer to the Sierras, and conducted extensive fieldwork in California, Nevada, Idaho, and Oregon.
In 1935 Steward began a long involvement with the Bureau of Indian Affairs. He was key in the reform of the organization known as the 'New Deal for the American Indian,' a restructuring which involved Steward in a variety of policy and financial issues. For the next eleven years Steward became an administrator of considerable clout, editing the Handbook of South American Indians. He also took a position at the Smithsonian Institute, where he founded the Institute for Social Anthropology in 1943. He also served on a committee to reorganize the American Anthropological Association and played a role in the creation of the National Science Foundation. He was also active in archaeological pursuits, successfully lobbying Congress to create the Committee for the Recovery of Archaeological Remains (the beginning of what is known today as 'salvage archaeology') and worked with Wendell Bennett to establish the Viru Valley project, an ambitious research program centered in Peru.
Steward's career reached its apogee in 1946 when he took up the chair of the anthropology department at Columbia University -- the center of anthropology in the United States. At this time, Columbia saw an influx of WWII veterans who were attending school thanks to the GI Bill. Steward quickly developed a coterie of students who would go on to have enormous influence in the history of anthropology, including Sidney Mintz, Eric Wolf, Stanley Diamond, Robert Manners, Morton Fried, Robert Murphy, and influenced other scholars such as Marvin Harris. Many of these students particpated in the Puerto Rico Project, yet another large-scale group research study that focused on modernization in Puerto Rico.
Steward left Columbia for the University_of_Illinois_at_Urbana-Champaign, where he continued to teach until his retirement in 1968. There he undertook yet another large-scale study, a comparative analysis of modernization in eleven third world societies. The results of this research were published in three volumes entitled Contemporary Change in Traditional Societies. Steward died in 1972.
Contributions to anthropologyIn addition to his role as a teacher and administrator, Steward is most remembered for his contributions to the study of cultural evolution. During the first three decades of the twentieth century, American anthropology was suspicious of generalizations and often unwilling to draw broader conclusions from the meticulously detailed monographs that anthropologists produced. Steward is notable for moving anthropology away from this more particularist approach and developing a more social-scientific direction. His theory of "multilinear" evolution examined the way in which societies adapted to their environment. This approach was more nuanced than Leslie White's theory of "unilinear evolution," which was influenced by thinkers such as Herbert Spencer. Steward's interest in the evolution of society also led him to examine processes of modernization. He was one of the first anthropologists to examine the way that national and local levels of society were related to one another.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License at http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license. You must provide a link to http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
To view or edit this article at Wikipedia go to http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Steward
|
©
2005 Music
Entertainment Network. A Cyprus
Roussos Music Entertainment Company. All Rights Reserved.
Articles
from
Wikipedia
Encyclopedia
are licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may copy and
modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under
this license. You must provide a link to http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
All trademarks and service marks including Napster,
Rio
MP3 Player, iRock,
Creative
MP3 Player, iRiver,
Apple iPod
Portable
MP3 Players + iTunes,
eMusic,
Guitar
Center Musicians
Friend, Zzounds
Musical Instrument Equipment Store, BMG
Music Service, Columbia
House DVD Club, eBay,
Amazon,
Netflix,
Jamster,
Gamefly,
Friendster,
Music123
Musical Instruments, Billboard,
MTV,
Yahoo
Launch, Overture
Yahoo Search Marketing, MusicMatch,
Kazaa,
Kazaa
Lite, Morpheus
software, Real
Rhapsody, Bose,
Sheet
Music Plus, Billboard
Magazine, Rolling
Stone Magazine, Walmart
Downloads, Barnes
and Noble book store, CDUniverse,
Tower
Records, MSN
Music, MySpace,
Limewire,
WinMX,
Google
Adsense, Alibris,
TicketsNow,
MusicSpace,
uBid
are property of their respective owners. Music.us has no affiliation with
MySpace
or Friendster,
but offers alternative services. Disclaimer: Uploading or downloading
of copyrighted works without permission or authorization of copyright
holders may be illegal and subject to civil or criminal liability and
penalties. Please buy
music and refrain from any illegal downloading activity. User
submitted free content, including Wikipedia encyclopedia or modification
thereof by end users, do not reflect the views and opinions of Music.us
and are for educational and research development purposes. Our website
offers advanced search for bands and artists bio and albums and browse
options for artist band biographies resources and information. We offer
blogs and community building tools for authors, bands and users. The Music.us
Entertainment Network is web's most comprehensive one-stop shopping, community
networking and education site. Find song lyrics, guitar tablature, posters,
ring tones, free MP3 downloads and hourly updating news feeds on musicians
and any genre style including rock,
pop,
hip
hop, country,
christian,
rap,
classical,
folk,
dance,
latin,
R
and B, blues,
punk,
heavy
metal, alternative,
guitar,
bass,
drums,
gospel,
wedding,
arabic,
jazz,
soundtrack,
world,
reggae,
soul
and more. Privacy Policy
- Site Map
- MP3 - Music Downloads
- Song Lyrics
| |