- PII
- S0869-54150000339-5-1
- DOI
- 10.7868/S50000339-5-1
- Publication type
- Article
- Status
- Published
- Authors
- Volume/ Edition
- Volume / Issue 3
- Pages
- 70-79
- Abstract
- Using the correspondence between Franz Boas and his Soviet graduate student Yulia Averkieva, this paper discusses both their warm personal relationship and their different views on the political situation in Soviet Russia in the 1930s and its impact on academic research. Boas’ letters to his Russian graduatestudent as well as excerpts from his correspondence with Russian and American colleagues, interviews, and publications are used to demonstrate that while he remained sympathetic to socialism in general and to the lofty goals of the Soviet state in particular even in the 1930s, he was well aware of the show trialsand the lack of freedom in the USSR as well as an increasing ideological pressure on scholars working in the social sciences, including anthropology. A loyal supporter of the Soviet regime and a Young Communist League member, Averkieva strongly disagreed with the father of American anthropology,while always remaining deeply grateful to him for mentoring her in New York and taking her to the field in 1930. She retained those sentiments for the rest of her life, even while criticizing Boas’ theoretical views from an orthodox Marxist perspective in several of her publications in the 1950–70s.
- Keywords
- history of Soviet anthropology, history of American anthropology, Boas, Averkieva
- Date of publication
- 01.05.2018
- Year of publication
- 2018
- Number of purchasers
- 8
- Views
- 593