Meet the pioneering female anthropologists who coped with illness, shipwreck, loneliness and misogyny to document the remarkable lives of people in distant parts of the world where 'ladies' were not meant to travel.
The extraordinary women featured in this book defied early twentieth-century conventions to carry out groundbreaking field research in distant parts of the world where 'ladies' were not meant to travel. Here you will meet Barbara Freire-Marreco living among Pueblo people in south-western USA; Maria Czaplicka with reindeer herders of Siberia; Beatrice Blackwood in remote villages of Papua New Guinea; Elsie McDougall among textile artists in Mexico and Guatemala; and Ursula Graham Bower in the Naga Hills of north-east India. Bower was even made an honorary Captain in the British Army leading an irregular force of Naga men in scouting operations against the Japanese during the Second World War.
These pioneering anthropologists learned local languages, established relationships across supposed cultural boundaries, insisted on the dignity of humanity in all cultural settings and documented with remarkable meticulousness the lives of the peoples with whom they lived and worked. One woman, the Mori scholar Mkereti, wrote about her own people, but spent the final years of her life far from home in Oxfordshire. Each of these women collected objects and left archives of photographs, manuscripts, diaries and letters, which tell the inspirational stories of their encounters and adventures.
By:
Pitt Rivers Museum Edited by:
Julia Nicholson Imprint: Bodleian Library Country of Publication: United Kingdom Dimensions:
Height: 224mm,
Width: 170mm,
ISBN:9781851246502 ISBN 10: 1851246509 Pages: 224 Publication Date:01 July 2025 Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming
Julia Nicholson was Curator and Joint Head of Collections at the University of Oxford's Pitt Rivers Museum, 19942024.