- Homer Barnett
Homer Garner Barnett (1906 in
Bisbee, Arizona -May 9 ,1985 ) was an American anthropologist, thinker, fieldworker, and teacher.Education
He began his studies at
Stanford in civil engineering but soon quit to rethink his major. When he returned to Stanford it was as a liberal arts major with an emphasis on philosophy. [http://www.jstor.org/view/00027294/ap020469/02a00110/0] He graduated in 1927. He later attended theUniversity of California for hisPh.D. , granted in 1938. His specialization wasculture change andapplied anthropology .As a student, Barnett did field work among the American Indians of
Oregon ,Washington , and northwesternCalifornia , particularly theYurok ,Hupa ,Yakima , and several small groups of the Oregon coast. Some research concerned diverse ethnological matters but focused primarily on theIndian Shaker religion and thepotlatch . The latter was the subject of his doctoral dissertation. [ [http://www.nmnh.si.edu/naa/guide/_b1.htm Homer Barnett Papers, bulk 1934-1973] , National Anthropological Archives, Washington, D.C.]Teaching
In 1939 after receiving his Ph.D. he began working at the
University of New Mexico as the field director of theJemez Archeological Field School . Soon after this position ended he moved on to theUniversity of Oregon . Here he became the second member of the Anthropology department, along withLuther Cressman . After serving for a few years duringWorld War II , Barnett returned to the University of Oregon and continued to study Pacific cultures.From 1947 to 1948, Barnett conducted field research on the indigenous people of
Palau .Barnett continued to study American Indians in California and the Pacific Northwest and displaced communities in the Pacific. He served as a visiting lecturer for the
American Anthropological Association from 1960 until 1961. He spoke at college campuses that did not have anthropology departments, trying to spread his knowledge of anthropology.Barnett became an emeritus professor at the University of Oregon in 1971 and officially retired in 1974. After his retirement Barnett worked on writings and publications up until the time of his death May 9, 1985. [ [http://www.uoregon.edu/~assembly/Assembly1984-1985ALL.html UO Assembly Records 1984-1985] ]World War II
During World War II he stopped teaching to participate in the
Far Eastern Language and Area Training Program of theUniversity of California at Berkeley . Here he trained volunteer service men to be effectively gain information from native informants to help the war effort. In 1944 he began working with theEthnogeographic Board to provide scientific information about human and natural resources of world areas. He later began working with theWar Document Survey in the Pacific to give advice about documents that the U.S. government was acquiring from other governments during the war.Select bibliography
*"Culture element distributions. VII: Oregon coast", 1937
*"Gulf of Georgia Salish", 1939
*"Innovation: the basis of cultural change", 1953
* [http://bcheritage.ca/salish/ph2/trad/118.htm "The Coast Salish of British Columbia"] , 1955
*"Anthropology in administration", 1956
*"Indian Shakers; a messianic cult of the Pacific Northwest", 1957
*"Peace and progress in New Guinea", 1959
*"Being a Palauan", 1959
*"Palauan society, a study of contemporary native life in the Palau Islands", 1959
*"Application to the National Science Foundation for research funds in support of a project entitled a comparative study of cultural change and stability in displaced communities", 1962
*"The nature and function of the potlatch", 1968
*"The Yakima Indians in 1942", 1969
*"Qualitative science", 1983 (ISBN 0533053730)
*"Culture processes", 1992References
External links
* [http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv99538 Homer G. Barnett papers at the University of Oregon]
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