Hortense Powdermaker

American cultural anthropologist
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Quick Facts
Born:
Dec. 24, 1900, Philadelphia
Died:
June 15, 1970, Berkeley, Calif., U.S.
Subjects Of Study:
United States

Hortense Powdermaker (born Dec. 24, 1900, Philadelphia—died June 15, 1970, Berkeley, Calif., U.S.) was a U.S. cultural anthropologist who helped to initiate the anthropological study of contemporary American life. Her first monograph, Life in Lesu (1933), resulted from fieldwork in Melanesia. She studied a rural community in Mississippi about which she wrote in After Freedom: A Cultural Study in the Deep South (1939).

Later she applied the methods of cultural anthropology to the Hollywood motion-picture community, publishing the results as The Dream Factory (1950). Copper Town (1962) deals with cultural changes in South Africa. Her autobiography, Stranger and Friend: The Way of an Anthropologist, was published in 1966.

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