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Blkberry Winter
Margaret Mead

Blkberry Winter

Simon & Schuster (1972)

Subject

  • Biography & Autobiography / General
  • Biography & Autobiography / Science & Technology
  • Juvenile Nonfiction / Biography & Autobiography / General
  • Juvenile Nonfiction / Biography & Autobiography / Historical
  • Non-Classifiable

Plot

During her life Margaret Mead represented many things to the American public; sage, scientist, noncomformist, crusader for world peace & archetypal grandmother. An enduring cultural icon, she came to symbolize a new kind of woman, one who successfully combined marriage & motherhood with a career & scholarship with a singular concern for its role in the lives of ordinary people. Even today, when memoirs of successful women scientists & scholars remain scarce, Blackberry Winter , 1st published in '72, provides a rare glimpse of a pioneering woman's formative journey. In her chapters "On Being a Granddaughter" & "The Pattern My Family Made Me," Mead examines the wisdom she gained from her maternal grandmother as well as the inheritance she recieved from her ancestors, & how her upbringing fueled her desire for a fulfilling career that would reflect her own emerging values. We are treated to captivating portraits of bohemian life in NYC in the '20s; her early days at the American Museum of Natural History, where she met her longtime mentor, Franz Boas, & friend, Ruth Benedict; & 1st field trip to study adolescent girls in Samoa. Near the book's end, in "On Being a Grandmother," she reflects on the legacy she leaves her descendants, indeed, all of humanity. This autobiography, reissued for a new generation of readers, will appeal to any eager to discover a woman of our century who made her way in a world seldom hospitable to the dreams & accomplishments of women.

Personal

Location B05-Nonfiction/Biographical (by subject)
Index 2635
Added Date Aug 08, 2017 01:23:31
Modified Date Sep 09, 2022 02:11:04