http://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUSTRE5A24HT20091103
French anthropologist Levi-Strauss dies at 100
Tue Nov 3, 2009 1:22pm EST
Email | Print | Share| Reprints | Single Page[-] Text [+] By Estelle
Shirbon
PARIS (Reuters) - French intellectual Claude Levi-Strauss, the
founder
of structural anthropology, has died at the age of 100, his
publishing
house Plon said on Tuesday.

Levi-Strauss, who was known to a wider public thanks to his 1955
memoir and masterpiece, "Tristes Tropiques," died on Saturday. He
would have turned 101 on November 28.


"He was France's greatest scientist," said writer Jean d'Ormesson,
fellow member of the Academie Francaise which brings together the
elite of the country's intellectual establishment.


A brilliant student who excelled at geology, law and philosophy,
Levi-
Strauss was posted to Brazil as a professor in 1935. It was there
that
he found his vocation for anthropology.


He conducted several expeditions into remote areas of the Amazon
rainforest and the Mato Grosso to study the customs of local tribes,
starting to develop theories and methods that would later have a
profound impact on his field.


He returned to France and was drafted into the French army at the
start of World War Two. After the defeat of France by the Nazis, he
realized that being Jewish had now become dangerous and he moved to
the United States until 1944.


Over the following years, he held a number of prestigious scientific
posts in Paris and New York and started to churn out his influential
scientific volumes.


"I HATE VOYAGES"


In particular, he used tribal customs and myths to show that human
behavior is based on logical systems which may vary from society to
society, but possess a common sub-structure.


These findings, which challenged the notion that Western European
culture was somehow unique or superior, resonated with the ideas of
opponents of colonialism and Levi-Strauss gained a following beyond
the circle of professional anthropologists.


He argued that linguistics, communications and mathematical logic
could be used to reveal fundamental social systems.


Exceptionally erudite, Levi-Strauss was not the most accessible of
thinkers and many of his works are impenetrable to laymen, but he
managed to transcend the esoteric bounds of science with "Tristes
Tropiques."


A detailed account of social behavior among Brazilian tribes,
"Tristes
Tropiques" was set apart from the author's other writings by its
autobiographical content.


While the work's opening sentence -- "I hate voyages and explorers"
--
was hardly designed to win the approval of his scientific peers,
lovers of literature considered it a triumph.


The academy that awards France's most prestigious literary prize, the
Goncourt, announced the night before making public their choice that
year that they regretted being unable to choose "Tristes Tropiques"
because it was not a novel.


He achieved France's highest recognition for a scientist in 1973,
when
he was elected to the Academie Francaise. He also received numerous
honors from foreign universities and governments, including Brazil.



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