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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Reo_FortuneReo Fortune - Wikipedia

    Reo Franklin Fortune (27 March 1903 – 25 November 1979) was a New Zealand-born social anthropologist. Originally trained as a psychologist, Fortune was a student of some of the major theorists of British and American social anthropology including Alfred Cort Haddon, Bronislaw Malinowski and Alfred Radcliffe-Brown. [1]

  2. 11 de sept. de 2019 · In September of 1931, Margaret Mead and Reo Fortune set out from New York to conduct fieldwork in New Guinea. Their initial choice of field site was among a Plains people, later called the Abelam, “We had seen pictures of the splendid ceremonial houses and we hoped for an elaborate culture,” Mead w

  3. 3 de abr. de 2016 · Concretamente, relata el viaje que hizo en 1933 al río Sepik, en Nueva Guinea, con su segundo marido, Reo Fortune. Allí se encontraron con Gregory Bateson, un biólogo británico acosado por ...

  4. Reo Franklin Fortune died in Cambridge on 25 November 1979 aged 76. He was born in Coromandel, New Zealand, and graduated M.A. in Philosophy, specialising in Psychology, at Victoria University College, Wellington, in 1924. He took a Diploma in Anthropology at Cambridge in 1927, and then, with A. C. Haddon’s encouragement, did six months ...

  5. Loving a Village. Margaret Mead and Reo Fortune in Pere Village in 1928. In 1928 the newly married young anthropologists Margaret Mead and Reo Fortune lived for six months in a village called Pere, off the south coast of a small island called Manus in the Territory of Papua New Guinea ( Figs. 1, 2). Toward the end of her life, on the last of ...

  6. After a field trip to Nebraska in 1930 to study the Omaha Native Americans, she and her husband, Reo Fortune, next headed to the Sepik region of Papua New Guinea for two years. While there Mead did pioneering work on gender consciousness.

  7. 23 de ago. de 2010 · But Mead's second husband and fieldwork partner, Reo Fortune, disagreed with this in a 1939 article, “Arapesh Warfare,” which presented evidence that before pacification Arapesh society countenanced warfare.