Growing Up in New Guinea
A Comparative Study of Primitive Education| By: | Margaret Mead |
| Publisher: | HarperCollins |
| Print ISBN: | 9780688178116 |
| eText ISBN: | 9780062566133 |
| Edition: | 0 |
| Format: | Reflowable |
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Now with a new introduction by Howard Gardner, Ph.D., Mead's second book following her landmark Coming of Age in Samoa, Growing Up in New Guinea established Mead as the first anthropologist to look at human development in a cross-cultural perspective. Margaret Mead was 23 when she traveled alone to Samoa on her first expedition to the South Seas. Her first book, Coming of Age in Samoa, chronicled that visit and launched her distinguished career. Following her landmark field work focusing on girls in American Samoa, noted anthropologist Margaret Mead found that she needed to study preadolescents in order to understand adolescents. In 1928 she went to Manus Island in New Guinea, where she studied the play and imaginations of younger children and how they were shaped by adult society. Mead and her second husband, Reo Fortune, lived in 24-hour contact with the inhabitants of this fishing village. What did she discover about a society that prized property over play and physical prowess over imagination? A Classic Work of Ethnography: A vivid, firsthand account of the Manus people of the Admiralty Islands, documenting the daily lives, social structure, and values of a preliterate water-dwelling society. Pioneering Child Development Study: Explore Mead's groundbreaking research into how children learn physical dexterity and respect for property, alongside a surprising absence of imaginative play and animistic thinking. Cross-Cultural Family Dynamics: Discover the unique Manus family structure where the indulgent father, not the mother, plays the primary role in a child’s emotional life, and marriage is a strained economic contract. Culture and Personality: A foundational text on cultural determinism that contrasts the free, undisciplined childhood of the Manus with their puritanical, work-obsessed, and materialistic adult world.