Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict were two of the most
important influences on anthropology during their lifetimes. Many know of
Mead’s popular writings in this subject area, particularly her Coming of Age
in Samoa. She had an important impact on the US populations views during a
time when news agencies and popular magazines went to experts for opinions on
events and phenomena, rather than using a now more prevalent
“man-on-the-street” approach to reporting. Fewer people are familiar with Ruth
Benedict, who has been recognized by most academics as the successor of Franz
Boas (founder of modern US anthropology), and the first woman president of the
American Anthropological Association. The fact that the careers of these two
women began before women had the vote, during a time when many of their
colleagues thought of women as mentally inferior to men, is a testament to
their determination and ability.
The relationship between these two women is fascinating for
their individual brilliance, as well as their intellectual influence on each
other. Banner spends a great deal of time discussing how they communicated
around their ideas and edited each other’s work. In addition, the author
discusses the people, (friends and foes), who surrounded these two women as part
of the social circle of international anthropology. The depiction of this
circle provides a rich portrait of an expanding field of human exploration and
the personalities that molded it.
Prior to Intertwined Lives, there was some
controversy concerning whether or not Mead and Benedict had a sexual
relationship. While there are still some deniers, Banner’s study is “the first
biographical account of the lives of these two women to draw on all their
papers.” This author had access to love letters that previous generations of
researchers did not. Large portions of their private writing had been “restricted
until their close friends and associates had died,” which is a standard
practice. (Banner, p. ix). Professor Banner quotes passages of letters like
this where Benedict writes “How little the lovemaking solved in our feeling for
each other,” which clearly show a sexual component to the relationship.
(Banner, p. 272). While the author discusses Mead and Benedict’s five year
sexual relationship, she does not present it as the central feature of their
bond. It is one element which occurred early in a deep friendship that spanned
24 years, involving a great deal of personal support and impelling mutual
scholarly influence.
At times, Banner is too psychoanalytical. She states that
Benedict “felt peaceful with Margaret, who rested her “like a padded chair and
a fireplace.” Our biographer adds “that image suggests domestic tranquility,
but it also suggests domination, for it was fathers who sat in armchairs in
front of fireplaces.” (Banner, p. 185). Benedict’s feeling of tranquility is
clear. Banner injects her own Freudian gloss which has questionable merit. This
over-analysis is not limited to the relationship between the two subjects. Professor
Banner later describes a painting in the childhood home of Margaret’s second
husband, Gregory Bateson; a watercolor by Blake that shows Eve with the Serpent
and Satan: “being an angel, Satan has no genitals of his own. Did Gregory think
of himself as a devil with women, as an ambiguous male who was both powerless
and all-powerful?” (Banner, p. 346). Okay, Bateson did dream about this
watercolor for years, but it would have been a disturbing, memorable image in
any child’s home. The author’s interpretation is a reach. Freudian
psychoanalysis was a fashion during the lives of these scientists. They spent
many hours and letters discussing the psyche with intricate fabrication. But we
do not have to. The factual information is enough.
Anyone expecting these independent female leaders in
anthropology to have 21st Century notions concerning women or LGBT
people, are in for a disappointment. While neither viewed being lesbian or gay as
harmful to society, they both saw this characteristic as abnormal. “In Mead’s
cultural scheme, homosexuals are more maladjusted than heterosexuals” because
they have given-up “the drive to procreate.” (Banner, p. 356). Benedict saw
“homosexuality…as an abnormality shaped by society.” (Banner, p. 274). There
were a few individuals who thought that being LGB or T was equal in health to
heterosexuality (Magnus Hirschfeld in the 1890s comes to mind), but they were a
tiny minority. Mead’s views on women deserve special attention for their
controversial nature. While “feminists of the 1970s…claim her as their
forerunner,” Betty Friedan “identified her as the architect of the
back-to-the-home movement of the 1950s.” (Banner, p. 364). Banner, herself a
professor of History, Women’s Studies and Gender Studies, reports both the
progressive and regressive opinions of her two anthropologists with the
forgiving equanimity of a historian who understands that we are all a product
of our times and cultures.
As a responsible biographer, Lois Banner has marshaled a
voluminous quantity of material by and about her subjects. It is undoubtedly
more demanding to create a dual biography, rather than focusing on one
individual, but the rewards are also great. In addition to creating a unique
record of a relationship, revealing the immense intellectual spark that they collectively
produced, there is the value of comparative research. In the author’s own
words, “Benedict and Mead both believed that the comparative anthropology of
several societies offered insights into all of them; similarly, comparing the
biographies of two individuals can shed light on each of them.” (Banner, p.
11). Banner shares this complexity of information with an elegant style as
fluid as conversation, intertwining their stories as these two women
intertwined their lives.
Banner, Lois W. Intertwined Lives. Margaret Mead, Ruth
Benedict, and Their Circle. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2003.
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