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Intertwined Lives: Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict, and Their Circle
 
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Intertwined Lives: Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict, and Their Circle (Paperback)
by Lois W. Banner (Author)
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Intertwined Lives: Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict, and Their Circle Margaret Mead: A Life
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Banner (American Beauty; In Full Flower; etc.) offers here a joint biography of two major figures in American anthropology. Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead met in 1922, when Benedict was a teaching assistant and Mead a student at Barnard College. Two years later, they were lovers. From the 1920s until Benedict's death in 1948, they remained friends and intellectual collaborators. For each, anthropological research and personal experience were interconnected; not only did a variety of co-workers become lovers and friends, but their sexual experiences shaped their theoretical positions on such questions as the "normalcy" of heterosexuality or the role of culture in defining deviancy. Banner's is the first work to use previously restricted private letters and papers of Mead and Benedict. She also draws heavily on recent decades of writing on lesbian history and queer theory. The results are uneven, mostly due to Banner's determination to find sexual abuse and lesbian subcultures in Benedict's youth and same-sex erotics in Mead's girlhood. Banner's "gaydar" works better when analyzing the variety of relationships the two women formed as adults, especially the way their own attractions morphed into fieldwork theorizing. While Banner plays fast-and-loose with some sources, this chronicle of the lives of two modern anthropology titans is bound to raise considerable academic interest. 28 b&w illus. not seen by PW.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist
The influential social anthropologists Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict, unalike in age, appearance, and demeanor, met at Barnard College in 1922, when Mead was a student and Benedict a teacher, and again in Rome in September 1926. There their friendship, strained by Mead's affairs with men, erupted in a quarrel over the sibyls in Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel paintings, important players in Benedict's fantasy life. Their bond survived, and the friends and, despite both being married (unhappily), lovers remained important to one another (they lived together just twice, in 1928 and in the mid-1940s). Such details spark Banner's work throughout and are possible because of access to hundreds of letters and documents in the Benedict and Mead papers that were opened to researchers in 2000-01. Indeed, this is the first account of Mead and Benedict that draws upon those resources. In addition, Banner was the first scholar to use the papers of Benedict's sister and of other archives, domestic and foreign. Thus this engaging, fast-reading dual biography newly enlightens scholars and general readers alike. Whitney Scott
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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