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    Cultural Identity According to Margaret Mead

    Number of Pages: 5

     

    Summary of the research paper:

    This paper examines cultural identity in five pages in terms of various influential factors including the theories of Margaret Mead. Two sources are cited in the bibliography.

    Name of Research Paper File: D0_MBmmead.rtf

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    Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
    that the culture of a people revealed itself through many facets. Some of those areas included social structure, religion, music, art and clothing. As such, Margaret Mead also sought to  bring the truths that she found from other cultures and bring them back to the United States in order to compare and contrast and offer compelling evidence for change if  it were warranted. Although all of the natural social sciences are able to look back and pay homage to certain founding fathers, Margaret Mead, as its mother, went to  Samoa to test her theories that the biological changes of adolescence could not be accomplished without a great deal of stress. However, what she found was that cultural conditions are  what may make it stressful. Her book is generally credited as marking the beginning of the field of culture and personality. Social structure, art, music and other defining characteristics, then,  can give the anthropologists clues as to the true identity of the culture. POINT ONE: Social Structure as basis for cultural identity The student should follow the order which  is summarized in the introductions. Therefore, the first characteristic to be defined will be that of social structure. Psychological anthropology, Meads forte, was proved true in the field test phase  in Samoa. What she found there was that culture influences personalities, not genetics. She concluded that "the adolescence is not necessarily a time of stress and strain, but that  cultural conditions make it so"(Mead 234). She found that this also applied to sex roles in three New Guinea tribes: Arapesh, Mudugumor and the Tchambuli(Mead 234). What was interesting  to her was that in cultures which were separated by very little geographic distance, there were striking differences in the way women were viewed and valued by the culture. Some 

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