Margaret Mead (1901-1978) was an American cultural anthropologist who became the most publicly prominent and widely read anthropologist of the twentieth century. She was born in Philadelphia and studied at Barnard College before completing her doctorate under Franz Boas at Columbia University. In 1925, at the age of twenty-three, she travelled to American Samoa to conduct fieldwork on adolescence — a period of turmoil in Western culture that many assumed was biologically inevitable. She wanted to test whether this turmoil was universal or culturally specific. Her book Coming of Age in Samoa (1928) argued that adolescence in Samoa was a calm and untroubled transition, suggesting that the storm and stress of Western adolescence was a product of culture, not biology. The book became an international sensation. She went on to conduct fieldwork in Papua New Guinea, Bali, and elsewhere, writing influential books on gender, temperament, and culture. She was also a tireless public intellectual, writing a column for Redbook magazine for many years and testifying before Congress on issues from nuclear weapons to environmental policy. She was married three times, all to fellow anthropologists, and her personal life was characterised by the same willingness to challenge convention that marked her intellectual work. She died in 1978.
Mead matters because she brought anthropological evidence to bear on the questions that most preoccupied her era: what is natural in human behaviour, and what is cultural? Her work on adolescence in Samoa and on gender roles in New Guinea challenged the assumption that the particular arrangements of Western society were biologically inevitable. If Samoan adolescents experienced the transition to adulthood as peaceful rather than turbulent, then the storm and stress of Western adolescence was not a biological fact but a cultural product — something that could be different. If some New Guinean societies reversed the gender roles that Western culture treated as natural, then Western gender arrangements were not biologically determined but culturally constructed. These were revolutionary claims that helped lay the intellectual foundations for feminism and for the broader questioning of social arrangements that the twentieth century produced. She also matters as a scientist who understood the obligation to communicate her findings to a general public, not just to other academics.
Coming of Age in Samoa (1928) is Mead's most accessible and most famous work.
Mary Catherine Bateson's With a Daughter's Eye (1984, Morrow) is a memoir by her daughter that gives a vivid personal portrait.
The PBS documentary Margaret Mead and Samoa (1988) presents both Mead's position and Freeman's challenge in an accessible format.
Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive Societies (1935) is Mead's most directly relevant work for gender studies. Male and Female (1949) is her most systematic treatment of gender across cultures.
The collection of essays edited by Lowell Holmes in The Fatal Hoaxing of Margaret Mead (1983, Clio Press) presents multiple perspectives.
Virginia Yans-McLaughlin's edited volume Malinowski, Rivers, Benedict and Others: Essays on Culture and Personality (1986, University of Wisconsin Press) provides context.
Mead proved that gender and personality are entirely cultural and have no biological basis.
Mead argued for the enormous power of culture to shape gender roles and personality — not that biology played no role at all. Her findings showed that the specific arrangements of Western culture were not biologically inevitable, since other cultures had very different arrangements. This is compatible with the position that biology sets some broad parameters within which culture exercises enormous variability. The contemporary scientific view is that both biology and culture contribute to gender and personality, and that the interaction between them is complex — which is broadly consistent with Mead's core argument about the power of culture.
The Freeman controversy proved that Mead's work was fraudulent.
Freeman's critique raised genuine methodological concerns about Mead's fieldwork but did not prove fraud. Most contemporary anthropologists take a nuanced view: some of Mead's specific claims about Samoa were probably overstated or based on unreliable testimony, but the core argument — that adolescent turmoil is significantly shaped by cultural arrangements rather than being a universal biological fact — retains substantial support. Freeman himself has been criticised for significant methodological problems in his own work on Samoa. The controversy is genuinely unresolved and continues to be discussed.
Mead thought Western culture was superior and used other cultures only as a mirror.
Mead was a committed relativist who respected the cultures she studied on their own terms. Her use of cross-cultural comparison to challenge Western assumptions was a form of criticism of her own culture, not a judgment that Western culture was the standard against which others fell short. She explicitly argued that different cultures had made different valid selections from human possibilities and that each deserved respect and understanding. She also acknowledged that Western culture had much to learn from other societies.
Mead's popularity means she was not a serious scientist.
Mead was a rigorous fieldworker who spent extended periods in the communities she studied, learned local languages, and produced detailed ethnographic accounts that were taken seriously by her peers. Her popularity with general audiences reflected her unusual ability to communicate complex findings accessibly, not a sacrifice of scientific rigour. She was elected president of the American Anthropological Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science and received honorary degrees from major universities. Her methodological weaknesses were real but they were those of her era, not uniquely her own.
The volume Remembering Margaret Mead (1991, Smithsonian Institution Press) provides assessments from colleagues and critics.
The analysis of Balinese Character (1942) in Willing Migrants (1992) examines her methodological innovations. For the broader context of American anthropology: Regna Darnell's Invisible Genealogies (2001, University of Nebraska Press) situates Mead within the Boasian tradition.
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