Ralph Linton

American anthropologist
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Quick Facts
Born:
Feb. 27, 1893, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.
Died:
Dec. 24, 1953, New Haven, Conn. (aged 60)
Subjects Of Study:
Tanala
culture

Ralph Linton (born Feb. 27, 1893, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.—died Dec. 24, 1953, New Haven, Conn.) was an American anthropologist who had a marked influence on the development of cultural anthropology.

As an undergraduate at Swarthmore College, Philadelphia, Linton pursued archaeological interests, taking part in expeditions to New Mexico, Colorado, and Guatemala (1912 and 1913). Following his graduation (1915) he examined a prehistoric site in New Jersey, the subject of his first professional writings. He returned to the Southwest again (1916 and 1919), but a two-year stay in the Marquesas Islands, beginning in 1920, diverted his interest from archaeology to ethnology. He became curator of American Indian and Oceanic collections at the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago (1922–28). He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University (1925) and made a one-man expedition to Madagascar and East Africa (1925–27) that resulted in his major ethnological work, The Tanala, a Hill Tribe of Madagascar (1933), and a major collection of artifacts, now mainly at the Field Museum.

He was a professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison (1928–37), Columbia University (1937–46), and Yale University (1946–53). The Study of Man (1936) is frequently regarded as his most important theoretical work. It is an influential synthesis of theories from anthropology, psychology, and sociology. In The Cultural Background of Personality (1945), he advanced the idea of “status personalities,” common elements that form the basic personality type in a culture. His final major work, The Tree of Culture (1955), elaborated on human origins and the biological and primate influences on cultural behaviour.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.