000 01667nam a22003258a 4500
001 BDZ0021042063
003 StDuBDS
005 20190913150600.0
008 121113s2013 ctua 000 0 eng|d
020 _a9780300187854 (hbk.) :
_c�30.00
040 _aStDuBDS
_cStDuBDS
_dStDuBDSZ
050 4 _aGN21
072 7 _aSOC
_2eflch
082 0 4 _a301.092
_223
100 1 _aMandler, Peter.
_0n 87150663
_912847
245 1 0 _aReturn from the natives :
_bhow Margaret Mead won the Second World War and lost the Cold War /
_cby Peter Mandler.
260 _aNew Haven, Conn. ;
_aLondon :
_bYale University Press,
_c2013.
263 _a201303
300 _a352 p. :
_bill. ;
_c25 cm.
520 8 _aCelebrated anthropologist Margaret Mead, who studied sex in Samoa and child-rearing in New Guinea in the 1920s and 30s, was determined as the Second World War approached to show that anthropology could help sum up the national character of the most complex, modern societies and produce better wartime strategies. This book follows her and her closest collaborators to their triumphant climax when Mead was chosen to be one of the principal cultural ambassadors from America to Britain in 1943.
600 1 0 _aMead, Margaret,
_d1901-1978.
_0n 78093416
_912848
650 0 _aNational characteristics.
_912849
650 0 _aEthnopsychology.
_912850
650 0 _aWorld War, 1939-1945
_xSocial aspects.
_912851
650 0 _aCold War
_xSocial aspects.
_912852
650 0 _aAnthropology
_zUnited States
_xHistory
_y20th century.
_912853
600 1 0 _aMead, Margaret,
_d1901-1978
_0n 78093416
_xFriends and associates.
_912854
650 7 _aSociety.
_2eflch
_910088
942 _cBK
999 _c11412
_d11412