ROBERT RED FIELD* 1897–1958
1959; Wiley; Volume: 61; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1525/aa.1959.61.4.02a00110
ISSN1548-1433
Autores Tópico(s)Asian Geopolitics and Ethnography
ResumoAmerican AnthropologistVolume 61, Issue 4 p. 652-662 ROBERT RED FIELD* 1897–1958 Fay-Cooper Cole, Fay-Cooper Cole Santa Barbara, CaliforniaSearch for more papers by this authorFred Eggan, Fred Eggan Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, CaliforniaSearch for more papers by this author Fay-Cooper Cole, Fay-Cooper Cole Santa Barbara, CaliforniaSearch for more papers by this authorFred Eggan, Fred Eggan Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, CaliforniaSearch for more papers by this author First published: August 1959 https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1959.61.4.02a00110Citations: 2 * Note: We are indebted to Mrs. Robert Redfield, Milton Singer, and Sol Tax for information and assistance in connection with biographical and other data, and for the preparation of the bibliography that follows. In addition, the addresses given at the Memorial Service, November 16, 1958, in Rockefeller Memorial Chapel have been printed, and Robert Maynard Hutchins' address has also been separately printed and distributed by William Benton on behalf of the Encyclopedh Britunnicu. Milton Singer has prepared a Memorial for publication in Scke, and in Man in India, and Sol Tax has written a brief biography to appear in the Encyclopedia Britannku. Mn. Redfield is preparing a series of published and unpublished papers for the University of Chicago Press. AboutPDF ToolsExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text accessShare full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions of Use and check box below to share full-text version of article.I have read and accept the Wiley Online Library Terms and Conditions of UseShareable LinkUse the link below to share a full-text version of this article with your friends and colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share a linkShare onEmailFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat Bibliography 1926 Anthropology, a natural science. Social Forces IV: 715–721. 1927 The Cerahpa and Castiyohpa in Tepoztlán.. Mexican Folkways 3: 137–143. 1928 Remedial plants of Tepoztlán: a Mexican folk herbal. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 18: 216–226. My adventures as a Mexican. The University of Chicago Magazine XX: 242–247. The Calpolli barrio in a present-day Mexican pueblo.. American Anthropologist 30: 282–294. An ancient art in an ancient village.. Mexican Folkways 4: 199–203. 1929 The carnival in Tepoztlán. Morelos. Mexican Folkways 5: 30–34. The material culture of Spanish-Indian Mexico.. American Anthropologist 31: 602–618. Antecedents of Mexican immigration to the United States. American Journal of Sociology XXXV: 433–438. 1930 Tepoztlán, a Mexican village: a study of folk life. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. The regional aspect of culture. Publication of the American Sociological Society XXIV: 33–41. 1931 Sociological investigation in Yucatan.. Carnegie Institution of Washington 30: 122–124. 1932 Maya archeology as the Mayas see it.. Sociologus 8: 299–309. Marriage in a Maya village.. Mexican Folkways 7: 154–159. 1933 Notes on the political organization of Yucatan and Parturition and care of the infant. The Peninsula of Yucatan: Medical, Biological, Meteorological and Sociological Studies, (collaborator with George Cheever Shattuck et al). Carnegie Institution of Washington 431. The Maya and modern civilization. Scientific Monthly XXXVII: 110–123.Also in The Culture of the Maya, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Supplementary Publication No. 16. 1934 Chan Kom, a Maya village (with Alfonso R. Villa). Washington, D. C, Carnegie Institutution of Washington Publication No. 448. Culture changes in Yucatan.. American Anthropologist 36: 57–69. Training in the social sciences under a divisional organization. Association of American Universities, Journal of Proceedings and Addresses 107–116. 1935 The long road back. The University of Chicago Magazine XXVII: 131–134. Outline for the study of acculturation (with Ralph Linton and Melville J. Herskovits). American Journal of Sociology XLI: 366–370. Folkways and city ways. In Renascent Mexico, Hubert Herring and Herbert Weinstock, eds. New York, Covici Fried. Designs for living. University High School Convocation Address, June, 1935, the University of Chicago. 1936 The place of the social sciences in a general education. Growth and Development: The Basis for Educational Programs, New York, Progressive Education Association. The Coati and the Ceiba. Maya Research III: 231–243. The back stairs of Yucatan. Three Americas I, New York, Committee on Cultural Relations with Latin America. Memorandum for the study of acculturation (with Ralph Linton and Melville J. Herskovits).. American Anthropologist 38: 149–152.(Outline for the study of acculturation reprinted from American Journal of Sociology, 1935). Middle America: ethnology. Bibliography with Robert C. Jones. Handbook of Latin American Studies, 1935, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press. What is an education? (pamphlet). Chicago, Chicago Parents' Association of the University Elementary School and the University High School, University of Chicago. 1937 The second epilogue to Maya history. The Hispanic American Historical Review XVII: 170–181. Middle America: ethnology. Bibliography with Robert C. Jones. Handbook of Latin American Studies, 1936. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press. 1938 Race and class in Yucatan. Cooperation in Research, Carnegie Institution of Washington, publication no. 501. Middle America: ethnology. Bibliography with Robert C. Jones. Handbook of Latin American Studies, 1937, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 1938. 1939 Culture contact without conflict.. American Anthropologist 41: 514–517. Introduction to St. Denis: A French Canadian parish, by Horace Miner. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Primitive merchants of Guatemala.. Quarterly Journal of Inter-American Relations 1: 42–56. Notes on the ethnography of Tzeltal communities of Chiapas. With R. Alfonso Villa Contributions to American Anthropology and History, no. 28, Carnegie Institution of Washington, publication no. 509. Middle America: ethnology. Bibliography with Robert C. Jones. Handbook of Latin American Studies, 1938, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press. 1940 Foreword to Pascua, a Yaqui village in Arizona, by E. H. Spicer. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. The folk society and culture. In Eleven twenty-six, Louis Wirth, ed. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Also in American Journal of Sociology XLV: 731–42. The Indian in Mexico. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science CCVIII: 132–143. Disease and its treatment in Dzitas, Yucatan, with Margaret Park Redfield. Contributions to American Anthropology and History no. 32, Carnegie Institution of Washington, publication no. 523. Middle America: ethnology. Bibliography with Robert C. Jones. Handbook of Latin American Studies, 1939, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press. 1941 The folk culture of Yucatán. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Also in the following translations: Yucatán: una cultura de transición; Fondo de Cultura Económica, Mexico, D. F., translation by Julio de la Fuente. Yucatan: civilizacao e cultura de folk, estudio de variacoes culturais en Yucatan. Livraria Martins Editora S.A., Rua S. Francisco, 77/81, Sao Paulo, translation by Asdrubal Mendes Goncalves. Cultural anthropology and modern agriculture. With W. Lloyd Warner. 1940 Yearbook of Agriculture, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1941. La ley primitiva. Revista Mexicana de Sociologia III: 17–44. Research in the social sciences: its significance for general education. Social Education V: 568–574. The reading period at the University of Chicago. New Frontiers in Collegiate Instruction. John Dale Russell, ed. Vol. XIII (Proceedings of the Institute for Administrative Officers of Higher Institutions), Chicago, University of Chicago Press. 1942 Del pensamiento sociologico actual: el Indio en Mexico. Revista Mexicana de Sociologia IV: 103–120.Espanoles e Indios: las dos herencias. Revista del Museo Nacional (Lima) 1, semestre 1942, XI, no. 1. (Chapter 4 of the Folk Culture of Yucatan.). Comment on the changing Mexican family.. American Sociological Review 7: 497. Research materials in Middle American ethnology, with special reference to Chicago libraries. College and Research Libraries, 311–325. Introduction to Levels of integration in biological and social systems. Biological symposia. Vol. VIII, by Jacques Cattell, ed. Lancaster, Pa. La sociedad folk. Revista Mexicana de Sociologia IV: 13–42. 1943 Anthropological research problems with reference to the contemporary peoples of Mexico and Guatemala. with Ralph Beats and Sol Tax.. American Anthropologist 45: 1–21. Culture and education in the midwestern highlands of Guatemala. American Journal of Sociology XLVIII: 640–648. Rural sociology and the folk society.. Rural Sociology 8: 68–71. Can rules or tutors educate? Mimeographed and distributed by Parents' Association, Laboratory Schools, University of Chicago. The Japanese-Americans. In American society in wartime, Charles R. Walgren Foundation Lectures, W. F. Ogburn, ed. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. What do we know about race. Scientific Monthly LVII: 193–201. Minorities. University of Chicago Round Table no. 262, radio discussion by Ralph McGill, Avery O. Craven and Robert Redfield. Is the good neighbor policy here to stay? University of Chicago Round Table no. 268, radio discussion by Percy Bidwell, Eric Johnston and Robert Redfield. Race tensions. University of Chicago Round Table no. 276, radio discussion by E. Franklin Frazier, Carey McWilliams and Robert Redfield. 1944 Race and human nature: an anthropologist's view. In Half a century onward, Fiftieth Annual Report of the Foreign Missions Conference of North America. The ethnological problem. In New perspectives on peace, Charles R. Walgren Foundation Lectures, George B. Huszar, ed. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. La raza en la naturaleza humana y social. Revista Mexicana de Sociologia VI: 163–171. Peace as a world race problem. University of Chicago Round Table no. 335, radio discussion by Louis Adamic, Ernest Colwell, Harley MacNair and Robert Redfield. The crisis of our time. University of Chicago Round Table no. 353, radio discussion by William Hocking, Robert Hutchins, Reinhold Niebuhr and Robert Redfield. 1945 Ethnic groups and nationality. Boletin Indigenista V: 235–244. Issues faced in the improvement of upper-division curriculums in the social sciences.. Emergent Responsibilities in Higher Education, John Dale Russell (Vol. XVII, Proceedings of the Institute for Administrative Officers of Higher Institutions). Ethnographic materials on Agua Escondida. Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Middle American Cultural Anthropology, no. 3, University of Chicago. Notes on San Antonio Palopo. Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Middle American Cultural Anthropology, no. 4, University of Chicago. A contribution of anthropology to the education of the teacher. The School Review LIII: 516–525. Death and resurrection in the life of nations. University of Chicago Round Table no. 367, radio discussion by William Hocking, Charles Merriam, Reinhold Neibuhr and Robert Redfield. Peace and the atom bomb. University of Chicago Round Table no. 399, radio discussion by Reuben Gustavson, Robert Hutchins and Robert Redfield. The state of the nation. University of Chicago Round Table no. 406, radio discussion by Reinhold Niebuhr, William Hocking, Thorfin Hogness and Robert Redfield. Social science in the atomic age.. Journal of General Education 1: 120–124. 1946 Race and religion in selective admission. Journal of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars, July, 1–16. Los Mayas actuales de la peninsula yucatanense. Part 1, chapter 1, and Raza y clases en Yucatan, part 2, chapter 1, Enciclopedia Yucatanense, Vol. VI, Mexico, D. F. The little man in a big society, what can he do? University of Chicago Round Table no. 417, radio discussion by Saul Alinsky, Robert Redfield and Louis Wirth Mexico, the next six years. University of Chicago Round Table no. 455, radio discussion by Ramón Beteta, Alejandro Carrillo and Robert Redfield. Consequences of atomic energy. The Phi Delta Kappan 27: 221–224. 1947 The folk society. American Journal of Sociology LII: 292–308.(Translation in Spanish: Revista Mexicana de Sociologia, IV, 1942.). Sociology and common sense.. American Sociological Review 12: 9–11. The social uses of social science. University of Colorado Honors Convocation, April 24, 1947, Boulder, Colorado. (Reprinted in Prospects for the Scientific Study of Human Relations, University of Chicago Round Table, no. 510:10–18.). The price of peace.. Common Cause 1: 1–2. The study of culture in general education. Social Education XI: 259–264. April is this afternoon: report of a 3-day survey by Robert Redfield and Sol Tax. Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Middle American Cultural Anthropology, no. 19, University of Chicago. Equality of educational opportunity. University of Chicago Round Table no. 486, radio discussion by Robert Redfield, George Stoddard, and Louis Wirth. Including Racial and religious discrimination in education by Robert Redfield (Race and religion in selective admission, Journal of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars, July 1946.) UNESCO and freedom of the mind. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 503, radio discussion by Jaime Torres Bodet, Reuben G. Gustavson, Julian S. Huxley and Robert Redfield. The Latin-American view of the good life. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 504, radio discussion by Daniel Cosio Villegas, Alfonso Reyes and Robert Redfield. Prospects for the scientific study of human relations. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 510, radio discussion by James B. Conant, Robert Redfield and George Stoddard. 1948 The art of social science. American Journal of Sociology LIV: 181–190. Introduction to Magic, science, and religion by Bronislaw Malinowski. Boston, Beacon Press, Glencoe, Illinois, Free Press. 1949 The Chinese in a world community.. Common Cause 2: 389–390. Ideological differences and world order.. Common Cause 3: 158–161. Visit to China. The University of Chicago Magazine 42: 9. The mind of primitive man. Invitation to Learning, radio discussion by W. Lloyd Warner, Leon Dupree and Robert Redfield. Mankind in a revolutionary age. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 606, radio discussion by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Robert Redfield. 1950 A village that chose progress. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Social science among the humanities. Measure I: 60–74. Social science in our society. Phylon XI: 31–41. Ethics and specialization. In Goethe and the modern age, Arnold Bergstraesser, ed. Chicago, Henry Regnery Company. Folk cultures From the Folk Society. American Journal of Sociology LII: 292–308, 1947. Maine's “ancient law” in the light of primitive societies. Western Political Quarterly III: 574–589. What's past is prologue. University of Chicago Round Table no. 615, radio discussion by Richard P. McKeon, Robert Redfield and Louis Wirth. Pattern for peace. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 645, radio discussion by Mordecai Johnson, Trygve Lie, Clarence Pickett and Robert Redfield. 1951 World government as seen by a social scientist.. Federalist Opinion 1: 9–20. Joad's “decadence” (a book review). Measure II: 343–350. The dangerous duty of the university.. School and Society 74: 161–165. It's a human problem. Journeys Behind the News, radio scripts XIII: 195051, Social Science Foundation of the University of Denver. The integrity of the university. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 708, radio discussion by James Bryant Conant, Lawrence A. Kimpton, J. E. Wallace Sterling and Robert Redfield. 1952 General characteristics of present-day Mesoamerican Indian society (with Sol Tax). In Heritage of conquest: the ethnology of Middle America Sol Tax, ed. Glencoe, Illinois, The Free Press. Social science research in general education. Journal of General Education VI: 81–91. The primitive world view.. American Philosophical Society 96: 30–36. Internal security in America.. World Frontiers 1: 12–19. The frontier of underdeveloped areas. Frontiers for Freedom, R. Gordon Hoxie, ed. The University of Denver Press. The study of man and the state of the world. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 742. radio discussion by Daryll Forde, Alfred Kroeber and Robert Redfield. Academic freedom in America and Britain. University of Chicago Round Table no. 743, radio discussion by S. G. Raybould, Robert Redfield, Bertrand Russell, George Shuster and Alan Simpson, Robert MacKenzie, Moderator. An Arab's view of Point IV. University of Chicago Round Table no. 749 and 750, radio discussions by Ali Othman and Robert Redfield. 1953 The primitive world and its transformations. Ithaca, N. Y., Cornell University Press. Reissued in 1957 as a Great Seal Book, Cornell University Press. Relations of anthropology to the social sciences and to the humanities. In Anthropology Today, A. L. Kroeber, ed. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Folk cultures (reprinted from American Journal of Sociology LII, 1947), and Integration: high and low, In An Introduction to social science, Arthur Naftalin, Benjamin N. Nelson, Mulford Q. Sibley, Donald C. Calhoun, eds. New York, J. B. Lippincott Co. The difficult duty of speech. The Quarterly Journal of Speech XXXIX: 6–14.Reprinted in The Gadfly, 1954. The natural history of the folk society.. Social Forces 31: 224–228.(Reprinted in Spanish in Ciencias Sociales, IV: 222–228.). Escuchar a los pueblos del mundo. La Torre, Ano 1, num. 3, (publication of public address, Occidental College, Oct. 24, 1952). Reprinted in Panorama, Vol. III, no. 10, 1954. Contributions to discussion of An appraisal of anthropology today, Sol Tax and others, eds. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Introduction to China's gentry: essays in rural-urban relations by Hsiao-Tung Fei. Revised and edited by Margaret Park Redfield. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. Propaganda and psychological warfare. University of Chicago Round Table no. 781, radio discussion by Hans Morgenthau and Calvin Stillman, including Listening to the world's peoples by Robert Redfield (reprinted in a slightly different form, as Does America need a hearing aid? Saturday Review, September 26, 11–12). 1954 Social scientist: man between. Chicago Review. Special Issue 8: 35–43. The true function of the nurse.. The Modern Hospital 83: 87–88. Community studies in China and Japan: a symposium. Introduction. Far-Eastern Quarterly XIV: 3–10. The civilization of fear. University of Chicago Round Table no. 836, radio discussion by Robert Redfield, George N. Shuster and Quincy Wright. The senate tries itself: the Watkins Committee. University of Chicago Round Table, no. 863, radio discussion by Albert E. Jenner, Jr., Harry M. Kalven, Jr., and Robert Redfield. The cultural role of cities (with Milton Singer). Economic Development and Cultural Change, Research Center in Economic Development and Cultural Change, University of Chicago 3: 53–73. 1955 The little community. Uppsala, Almqvist and Wikells boktr. Also Chicago, University of Chicago Press. The educational experience: the Redfield lectures. Pasadena, Cal., The Fund for Adult Education. The social organization of tradition. Far Eastern Quarterly XV: 13–21. Societies and cultures as natural systems.. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 85: 19–32. 1956 Peasant society and culture. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. How human society operates. In Man, culture, and society, Harry L. Shapiro, ed. Oxford University Press, New York. The genius of the university. Old Oregon XXXVI December, 195657. The cultural role of cities (with Milton Singer). Man in India, 36: 161–194. (Reprinted from Economic Development and Cultural Change, 3:53–73.). The relations between Indians and Ladinos in Agua Escondida, Guatemala. America Indigena XVI, no. 4. (Republication, with a new introduction, of certain pages of Notes on Agua Escondida, Guatemala, 1945.). Primitive and peasant: simple and compound society. In Society in India, A. Aiyappan and L. K. Bala Ratnam, eds. Madras. (Certain pages are a republication of chapter I of Peasant society and culture, 1956.). The characterization of civilizations, remarks to introduce a discussion. Planographed essay used in the course Introduction to the civilization of India. University of Chicago Press, Syllabus Division. 1957 Culture and education in Guatemala. American Journal of Sociology 48: 640–658. The universally human and the culturally variable. The Journal of General Education X: 150–160. Thinking about a civilization. In Introducing India in liberal education, proceedings of a conference held at the University of Chicago, May 17, 18, 1957, Milton Singer, ed. Chicago, The University of Chicago Press. (Also published in Introduction to the civilization of India. Chicago, The University of Chicago Press, Syllabus Division, 1–10.). 1958 Talk with a stranger. An Occasional Paper on The Free Society, The Fund for the Republic, Inc., 3–10. Values in action: a comment. Human Organization 17: 20–22. 1959 Civilization. In Colliers Encyclopedia. In press. Man, nature of, in Encyclopedia Britannica. In press. Thinker and intellectual in primitive society. In The Radin Festschrift. New York, Columbia University Press. In press. Citing Literature Volume61, Issue4August 1959Pages 652-662 ReferencesRelatedInformation
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