This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.
This collection has no restrictions.
This collection comprises the records of the Research in Contemporary Cultures project and its successor projects, Studies in Soviet Culture, Studies in Contemporary Cultures, and Study Program of Human Health and the Ecology of Man, inaugurated by Ruth Benedict in 1947 and continued by Margaret Mead and Rhoda Métraux between 1948 and 1956 at Columbia University and the American Museum of Natural History. Each project is documented in a series of nation-specific volumes containing extensive anthropological interviews with informants, descriptions of interviewers' observations of family interactions, notes on language use, etc. In addition, many volumes of group seminar minutes transcribe verbatim the proceedings of biweekly project-wide meetings, in which participants presented reports on specific topics. Drafts and final versions of project reports, as well as publications, administrative documents, and some financial records are also included in the collection. Most material was meticulously labeled, numbered, and dated by Mead and her colleagues. Each volume contains a table of contents and tabs for reference. The vast majority of the collection consists of copies made using a spirit duplicator; there is very little typewritten or handwritten material. Subseries III.2 and Series IV also do not appear to be complete sets of records.
Researchers and informants in the projects were given code numbers in project publications, in order to protect their anonymity but permit material created by the same individuals to be identified. While researchers are often identified by name in the records, informants are generally identified by their code numbers.
Series I: Columbia University Research in Contemporary Cultures, 1946-1981, bulk 1947-1951
Series III: Studies in Contemporary Cultures, 1950-1961, bulk 1951-1953
Series IV: Study Program of Human Health and the Ecology of Man, 1954-1957
This collection has been arranged into 4 series. Series I is arranged in alphabetical order by country, while Series II through IV are arranged in the order of the numbers assigned to each volume of records or document.
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.
This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.
This collection has no restrictions.
Reproductions may be made for research purposes. The RBML maintains ownership of the physical material only. Copyright remains with the creator and his/her heirs. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Research in Contemporary Cultures Records; Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
Mead, Margaret and Rhoda Métraux, editors. The Study of Culture at a Distance. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1953.: A published manual for studying culture at a distance, based on findings from the RCC and its successor projects.
Margaret Mead papers and South Pacific Ethnographic Archives, 1838-1996 : Margaret Mead's personal and professional papers. Located at the Library of Congress.
Ruth Fulton Benedict papers, 1905-1948: Papers of RCC founder and cultural anthropologist Ruth Benedict. At Vassar College.
Rhoda Métraux papers, 1837-1997: Papers of Mead's collaborator and SCC-B project leader Rhoda Métraux, also at the Library of Congress.
Oral history interview with Rhoda Métraux, 1994: Oral history interview primarily consisting of Métraux's description of her early life experiences in Germany, which informed her study of German culture in SCC-B. In the Oral History Archives at Columbia, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University.
Leopold Haimson papers, 1890s-1999: Papers of SSC project member Leopold Haimson, later Columbia University professor emeritus of Russian history. In the Bakhmeteff Archive, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University.
Nathan Leites papers, 1931-1955: Papers of SSC project member and political scientist Nathan Leites, who was employed at the RAND Corporation during the project. At the University of Chicago.
Ralph T. Fisher Papers, 1937-2005: Papers of SCC-A project member and historian of the Soviet Union Ralph Talcott Fisher. At the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Philip E. Mosely Collection, 1922-1972, 1984: One of two collections of professional papers of SSC project consultant and Columbia University professor of international relations Philip E. Mosely. At the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Philip Edward Mosely Papers, 1930-1972: Another collection of professional papers of SSC project consultant and Columbia University professor of international relations Philip E. Mosely. In the Bakhmeteff Archive, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University.
Nelly Schargo Hoyt papers: Papers of RCC, SSC, and SCC project member Nelly Schargo Hoyt, later a professor of history at Smith College. In the Smith College Archives.
No additions expected.
These records are duplicate materials originally given to the Library of Congress in 1980, along with the rest of the Margaret Mead papers and South Pacific Ethnographic Archives, 1838-1996 by the Institute for Intercultural Studies. They were separated from the Margaret Mead papers during processing in 1983 and ultimately transferred to Columbia University.
In Margaret Mead and Rhoda Métraux's 1953 volume on the project, The Study of Culture at a Distance, Mead notes that the project's records were stored "in the custody of the Institute for Intercultural Studies, 15 West 77th Street, NYC, where they are available for consultation by professional workers." These materials were transferred from the Institute for Intercultural Studies to the Library of Congress in 1980 as part of the Margaret Mead papers and South Pacific Ethnographic Archives. During processing at the Library of Congress in 1983, these materials were separated from the collection as extraneous duplicates. Rather than being discarded, they were transferred to Georgetown University at the Institute for Intercultural Studies' request. Georgetown University stored the records until 2001, when they were transferred to Columbia University.
Transferred to the Rare Book and Manuscript Library from Georgetown University Special Collections Division, 2001 July 28.
Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library
This collection was processed by Carolyn Smith in 2015. Finding aid drafted by Carolyn Smith in May 2015 and completed by Celeste Brewer in November-December 2022 and March-April 2023.
The collection was previously called the Margaret Mead papers. The collection title was changed in December 2022 to better reflect the nature of its contents and to avoid confusion with Margaret Mead's papers at the Library of Congress.
The original order of the collection is not clear. Most materials were not physically rearranged during processing, though the contents of some boxes were consolidated after de-duplication. Unsorted loose materials were sorted, identified, and placed in folders accordingly. Papers stored in binders appeared to have been removed from binders and placed in folders by a previous archivist.
Excessive duplicate materials were discarded. Spirit duplicator masters in Boxes 27 and 28 were also discarded: copies made using these items are available elsewhere in the collection, and they transferred ink onto adjacent papers and folders. As a result, Boxes 27 and 28 no longer exist.
The Columbia University Research in Contemporary Cultures (RCC) project and its successor projects, Studies in Soviet Culture (SSC) Studies in Contemporary Culture (SCC), and Study Program of Human Health and the Ecology of Man (HEC), were a series of interrelated anthropological studies of societies inaccessible via direct observation that took place between 1947 and 1956. The RCC was inaugurated by Ruth Benedict at Columbia University with funding from a grant from the United States Office of Naval Research Human Resources division. Following Benedict's death in 1948, the research was continued and expanded in a series of successor projects by Margaret Mead, Rhoda Métraux, and colleagues at the American Museum of Natural History and Columbia University. These projects were among later entries in the now-defunct genre of national character studies: anthropological studies conducted during and immediately after World War II into the cultures of national and ethnic groups and the influence of those cultures on individuals' behavior.
The study of culture at a distance, according to Mead and Rhoda Métraux's 1953 manual of the same title, was an interdisciplinary approach developed by Benedict and expanded upon by Mead and their colleagues, which combined historical and anthropological methods to study cultures rendered temporally, spatially, and/or administratively inaccessible. For example, the Studies in Soviet Culture and RCC China research adopted this approach "due to barriers to travel and research." Meanwhile, the RCC studies of Jewish small towns, or shtetls, in Poland and Ukraine investigated societies the researchers explained had been "physically destroyed and the survivors scattered." Benedict also used the approach in her wartime studies of Japanese culture, commissioned by the Office of War Information and published in 1946 as The Chrysanthemum and the Sword.
RCC and successor project studies focused on cultural characteristics of nations they identified and described as follows: China, Czechoslovakia, The East European Jews before World War II, France, Great Russia before 1917, Poland, Syria, Germany, and the contemporary Soviet Union. "Brief preliminary explorations" of Italian and Spanish culture were also included in the projects. Studies analyzed cultural products including film, literature, and advertisements, but primarily focused on interviews with informants. These were people who had lived in the nations under study: immigrants, the children of immigrants, refugees, students studying abroad in the United States, and sometimes people from the United States who had lived abroad for extended periods. Informants were also sometimes administered projective tests, such as Rorschach tests.
More than 120 researchers from fourteen academic disciplines contributed to the RCC and its successors. The projects had a circular design in order to avoid the development of hierarchical structure or "vested interests," in which researchers were organized into groups by the cultures they studied, by approach or method, and into temporary groups for accomplishing specific tasks such as drafting reports on particular topics. Each senior researcher occupied at least two roles of different statuses in different groups; for example, convener in one group, and member in another. All project members met for General Seminars every two weeks. Each study's findings were summarized in final project reports.
The applicability of Soviet and Chinese cultural studies to U.S. geopolitical interests in the context of the early Cold War explains the expansiveness and abundance of resources afforded to this work. The Studies in Soviet Culture and Studies in Contemporary Cultures A projects, both directed by Margaret Mead, investigated the Soviet national character. RCC China included a detailed analysis of Chinese political character, while the Study Program of Human Health and the Ecology of Man investigated cultural factors related to the health of subjects of Chinese heritage in New York City. The Studies in Contemporary Cultures B project, directed by Rhoda Métraux, addressed German national character, a subject of similar interest to American military and political policy makers after the descent of the Iron Curtain. The Studies in Soviet Culture project was funded by the Rand Corporation, while the Studies in Contemporary Cultures project was funded partially by the Office of Naval Research and partially by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for International Studies.