The
Fateful Hoaxing of Margaret Mead:
A Historical Analysis of Her Samoan Research
by Derek Freeman
Summary-review by Dr Peter S. Cook
In 1928,
in her best-selling, "classic scientific study" Coming of Age
in Samoa, Margaret Mead reported that adolescents there
experienced complete sexual freedom, without the phenomena
associated with adolescence elsewhere. She declared that this
exception, which she had hoped to find, established that human
nature and behaviour is shaped entirely by culture, not
biological inheritance. She and her colleagues then worked to
establish this "cultural determinism" as the prevailing ideology
in the social sciences.
In 1983, Derek Freeman showed that
her account was seriously in error in many respects. He now
documents how this happened. Having neglected her assigned
study, Mead belatedly interrogated her two female companions
about their sexual customs, and she was "comprehensively
hoaxed". Freeman says she then "unwittingly misinformed the
entire anthropological establishment, as well as the
intelligentsia at large", so that for decades professors
throughout the Western world, quoting Mead to support cultural
determinism, misinformed their social science students about "an
issue of fundamental human importance" - the nature of human
nature.
When Freeman presented his case,
rather than being lauded by the anthropological community, he
was pilloried for criticising an icon. Now he presents decisive
evidence including, finally, an account published in 1931 by
Mead herself.
As one of the most eminent and
influential social scientists, Mead's flawed evidence was
relevant to intellectual culture and the social sciences for
much of this century. Areas adversely influenced by Mead's
misinformation included anthropology, psychology, Marxist
ideology, post-modernist relativism, the sexual revolution,
gender studies, feminism, childrearing, and childcare policies.
Freeman's book is a starting point for unravelling and
rethinking the ramifications of Mead's far-reaching but
misinformed influence.
This epic drama by Derek Freeman,
Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at the Australian National
University, will surely become a scientific classic. Many
facets contribute to its appeal and significance, and reviewers
have used a range of superlatives. Peter Munz, Emeritus Professor
of history, at Victoria University, Wellington, says: "This is a
remarkably readable and exemplary work of historical detection
which proves that one of the 20th century's most cherished pieces
of anthropological knowledge is nothing more than a myth." Richard
Dawkins, of Oxford University, says: "It is the extraordinary
influence that Mead's Samoan thesis exerted over intellectual
culture for much of this century that gives Derek Freeman's
detective story its unique fascination".
Why was
Margaret Mead so significant?
Born
in 1901, Margaret Mead was, for much of the 20th century, the
world's most eminent social scientist. Her 1928 book Coming of
Age in Samoa, describing how adolescents there experienced
complete sexual freedom without the problems of adolescence found
elsewhere, became an all-time best seller. She depicted a
low-stress, cooperative paradise. She had hoped to find a society
of this kind, to support the ideology of Franz Boas, her
supervisor. Together they declared that her evidence established
that human nature starts as a tabula rasa - a clean slate
which is shaped entirely by culture, not biological inheritance.
Margaret Mead played a crucial role in making this cultural
determinism the prevailing ideology in American anthropology and
social sciences. Freeman has shown how Mead's account of a Samoan
sexual utopia was seriously in error in many ways, and was based
on a hoax.
Although the ideology supported by her
account was unscientific and untenable, its influence was
far-reaching. It’s teaching that the newborn baby was
undifferentiated raw material, ready to be moulded to any pattern,
was welcomed by behavioural psychologists, seeming to legitimise
the behaviourist childrearing advocated by the psychologist, J.B.
Watson. His influential Psychological Care of the Infant and
Child also appeared in 1928. He advocated relentless
conditioning of the infant from birth, likening the parents' task
to that of the blacksmith shaping hot metal with hammers, though
he cautioned that "the blacksmith has all the advantage" because
after a mistake he can begin again. With a child "every stroke, be
it true or false, has its effect. The best we can do is to
conceal, skilfully as we can, the defects of our shaping". He
believed children should be treated as young adults: "Never kiss
or hug them, never let them sit in your lap". Marxist utopians
were likewise supported in their belief that, with no basic human
nature to stand in their way, social conditioning under communism
would produce the new man and woman.
Mead's seemingly authoritative
evidence encouraged sexual promiscuity. As antibiotics became
available to control venereal disease, and pills could avert
conception, the sexual revolution took off, until AIDS prompted
second thoughts. Mead's work influenced gender studies, and the
feminist childcare agenda, in denying biological influences even
in the behaviour and emotions of mothers and infants, relied
partly on her material. In considering human nature, behaviour and
culture, the influences of genetic inheritance were "altogether
irrelevant". To counter ethnocentrism, anthropology adopted the
doctrine of cultural relativism, holding that there were no firm
standpoints from which to appraise a culture. This relativism
nourished "post-modernist" thinking, seeing everything as
relative. Nothing is certain, anything-goes.
How did
this momentous hoax come about?
To see how a hoax involving three 24
year-old women on a remote Samoan island in 1926 had such
consequences, we must backtrack. Following publication of The
Origin of Species by Charles Darwin in 1859, there was much
debate about how evolutionary theory applied to humans. The
relative influences of heredity and environment were heatedly
argued in the nature-nurture debate, and some thinkers took
extreme positions.
Franz Boas, who became Professor of
Anthropology at New York's Columbia University from 1899, was born
in Germany in 1858. By 1883 he had been converted to neo-Kantian
philosophy, which argued that reality was a construct of the mind,
and it led to Boas' life-long antagonism to evolutionary thought.
(In an arctic expedition, while hungry for lack of food, and with
outside temperatures at minus 40 degrees C, he had sat in his
igloo studying Kant!)
Boas became powerfully convinced that
human nature, feelings and behaviour were entirely determined by
the social conditioning of culture, and he communicated this to
generations of students, many of whom became leading figures in
American anthropology.
In 1917 his followers decreed that
human culture is "superorganic", thus "instigating a massive
intellectual schism, proclaiming there was an abyss between
cultural anthropology and evolutionary biology, an 'eternal chasm'
that could not be bridged." "Boasian culturism was poised to
become one of the leading ideologies of the twentieth century",
and by the mid 1930's Boas had succeeded in "suppressing the
classical theory of evolution among practically the entire group
of leading American ethnologists".
Yet in 1924 evidence for this ideology
was still lacking. Boas decided that it might be obtained by a
study of heredity and environment in the behaviour of adolescent
girls in a "primitive" society somewhere or other. One documented
exception would make his case. Hoping that Samoa would provide it,
he arranged for the brilliant and ambitious young Margaret Mead to
have a National Research Council fellowship in the biological
sciences for this specific purpose.
The hoax
Mead arrived in Samoa on 31st August
1925. Without telling Boas, and in breach of his specific
instructions and the terms of her fellowship, she secretly
lined up a major additional study for the Bishop Museum of
Honolulu. After two months learning Samoan, she went to the
islands of Manu'a in November 1925 to study adolescent girls.
However, she was much more interested in the Bishop Museum project
and repeatedly gave it priority. Thus diverted, and frustrated by
many obstacles, including widespread devastation by a hurricane,
she became acutely anxious that she would disappoint Boas with her
lack of progress in studying the adolescent girls. Actually, she
had already recorded the correct information from two Samoan
informants, but it was not what she expected or wanted to hear.
And so, having taken a trip to the
island of Ofu, far from the girls she was failing to study, she
seized an opportunity on March 13, 1926, during a long walk, to
solve her "problem" quickly. One of her two 24 year-old companions
was a ceremonial virgin, and Mead, having concealed her marriage,
had three times accepted the same high status. While knowing the
great importance accorded to pre-marital virginity in Samoan
society, but unaware that she was breaching Samoan etiquette, she
resorted to suggestive interrogation of the two women about what
sexual adventures they and other Samoan girls might really get up
to at night. Surprised and embarrassed, they fell back on the
Samoan custom of playful hoaxing, of which Mead was also unaware.
After pinching each other, they told her the opposite of the
truth, and jokingly agreed with whatever she suggested, adding
suitable embellishments. She never asked whether this was
seriously true, and they had no idea that she would tell the
world.
Mead believed that, through behaving
like a Samoan girl, the true underlying "cultural pattern" had now
been secretly revealed to her. Without telling Boas how this
transformation of her "problem" had come about, she wrote to him
on March 14th saying she now had evidence for "the sort of thing"
she thought he wanted, concluding: "I hope you'll be pleased". And
indeed he was!
In an appendix, Freeman presents the
text of ten revealing letters between Mead and Boaz over the year
July 1925 - July 1926. On January 5th 1926 Mead asked Boas "If I
simply write conclusions and use my cases as illustrative material
will it be acceptable?" On March 18th she received Boas' agreement
to this proposal! And so, with no further checking, she abandoned
the systematic study for which she had her fellowship, and on
which her conclusions were presumed to be based. It would have
corrected her illusions, but it was never undertaken at all.
Having solved her "problem", she
decided to cut short her stay in Samoa, and leave as soon as
possible to holiday in Europe. She now found time to write to her
grandmother saying that she was leaving Samoa with a clear
conscience, adding a story she had written about the faraway
valley in rural Pennsylvania where she herself had come of age.
She entitled it "The Conscientious Myth Maker"! Having achieved
her scoop, she never made detailed inquiries into Samoan sexual
behaviour again; nor did she return to Samoa, apart from a
"sentimental five-day visit" in 1971, although in anthropological
parlance she claimed it as "her country".
Before embarking for Samoa in August
1925, she had posted a letter to her husband, Luther Cressman,
saying "I'll not leave you unless I find someone I love more".
When re-united with him in France in 1926, she sat on his knee and
reminded him of that letter. She then said: "Well, I met someone
aboard ship I love very much and I want to marry him".
Cressman later recorded that as a
young graduate, on being shown by a colleague "with chapter and
verse, that a conclusion of hers was untenable, Mead's defense
would always be, 'If it isn't, it ought to be,' to which she would
add, 'Well, what's so bad about that?'" Freeman says she was much
given to having hunches. She recorded one which involved her
influential conclusions in Sex and Temperament in Three
Primitive Societies (1935). She said that the most "bizarre"
of these societies was the Tchambuli, whose "formulation of
sex-attitudes contradicts our usual premises" (p.288). On March
21, 1933, she wrote from Tchambuli to Ruth Benedict, saying: "I've
gotten the key to this culture from my angle -- got it yesterday
during hours of sitting on the floor in a house in mourning. Now
it is straight sailing ahead, just a matter of working out all the
ramifications of my hunch". These "ramifications" in turn flowed
into her Male and Female of 1949. Many such anecdotes shed
some light on how her fertile mind worked.
Mead's
Samoan myth takes off
In Europe, she checked her
presentation with Ruth Benedict, and worked out the ramifications
of her Samoan hunch, to harmonise with the "cultural pattern"
which she believed had been secretly revealed to her. Conflicting
evidence was ignored, re-interpreted, or rationalized as
"deviant". She fashioned a brilliantly seductive description, far
removed from reality, of an idyllic, cooperative, easeful society
with relaxed, low-key human relationships, where sexual
promiscuity was a carefree, night-time recreation before, and
sometimes after, marriage. To account for these enjoyable but
casual relationships she described Samoan childrearing as leading
to no close maternal bonding or nuclear family attachments, which
was also untrue.
When she presented this version to
Boas on her return to New York, he was so pleased with her
conclusions in support of his views that he failed to check the
evidence of her records. As her official supervisor, he should and
could have seen the errors and contradictions in her Report.
Instead he was "completely satisfied", and his approval was sent
to the National Research Council.
Now Boas and Mead proclaimed that this
"research" established that human nature is shaped entirely by
culture, not biological inheritance. With Ruth Benedict (her tutor
and lover, who was later to write the influential text Patterns
of Culture of 1934) they resolved to fight to promote cultural
determinism with the "whole battery at their command". Boas, in
his 1928 Foreword to Mead's Coming of Age in Samoa: a
Psychological Study of Primitive Youth for Western Civilisation,
vouched for her book as the outcome of "a painstaking
investigation".
In an astonishing and salutary
chapter, Freeman describes how "The Mythic Process" took off, and
Mead's book was soon accepted as a "careful scientific work". She
got it endorsed by Malinowski in London, and other eminent men
followed suit. Havelock Ellis, quoting Mead, declared (quite
erroneously) that "a whole field of neurotic possibility had been
legislated out of existence" since Samoa had "no neurosis, no
frigidity, no impotence". On the basis of Mead's "enlightening
study" he advocated the adoption of sexual promiscuity by
Americans.
Thus, Mead, read by millions of avid
young intellectuals, redefined the tone and scope of the human
sciences, and established in the western imagination an idyllic
image of harmonious primitive societies. She later described it as
her "classical research", and it launched her career as one of the
most acclaimed and influential women of her time. She became the
most famous learned woman of her age, great pathfinder of personal
sexual liberty, and 'Mother to the World' (according to Time
magazine). In 1976 she became President of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, and her fame reached
the heavens when a large impact crater on Venus was named after
her. She died of cancer in 1978.
Jill Kerr Conway, in her 1994
introduction to extracts from Mead's autobiography, extols "…
Mead's epoch-making Sex and Temperament in Three Primitive
Societies (1935), which asserts the primacy of culture in
gendered behavior, thereby predating the modern feminist interest
in gender and culture by some thirty five years. Mead also
anticipated the feminist critique of marriage and the Western
preoccupation with heterosexual relationships by maintaining
throughout her life concurrent erotic and emotional relationships
with male and female partners… Mead published ten major works
between 1928 and 1977, moving from studies of child rearing in the
Pacific to the cultural and biological bases of gender, the nature
of cultural change, the meaning of cultural pluralism, … race
relations, and the origins of drug culture".
Though aware that "her approach to her
fieldwork" had been "savagely criticised, most notably by Derek
Freeman" (1983), Conway claimed "no critic has been able to
undermine the extent of Mead's contribution to anthropology, her
intellectual courage, and her willingness to tackle large subjects
of major intellectual consequence for her own and succeeding
generations. Her readiness to comment and her interest in all
aspects of society made her something of a culture heroine for the
English-speaking world in the post-second World war era."
The
denouement
But where was the truth in all
this? In 1940, a young New Zealand student of anthropology, Derek
Freeman, went to Samoa, expecting to confirm Mead's findings. Over
many years he gained an intimate understanding of Samoan society,
very different from that which Mead had described. He found that
her accounts of Samoan social rank, ethos and character,
childrearing, family life, adolescence, delinquency, and sexual
mores were all seriously in error. In 1983 he published, in
Margaret Mead and Samoa, a systematic refutation of these
errors, as he contrasted her account with his detailed evidence.
He had discussed his findings with Mead in 1964, and they
corresponded subsequently. She privately acknowledged that she had
been found to be wrong, but she died before seeing the early draft
which Freeman offered. She maintained that her account was true
and unalterable, never realising she had been hoaxed. Even in 1976
she was still attributing the easy nature of Samoan life to
freedom of sex.
The publication in 1983 of Freeman's
book was described as a "torpedo at the water-line" and "a seismic
event" for American anthropologists. Yet, far from receiving
approbation as a scientist whose evidence was correcting a
seriously erroneous record, he was seen as attacking the doyenne
of anthropology, an American icon whose opinion was revered. It
was unthinkable that her most famous book was in error. At first
they were appalled. Then there was fury, and during the 82nd
annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association in
November 1983, "in the barbaric faith that the scientific status
of a proposition can be determined by a show of hands at a tribal
get-together", a formal motion denouncing Freeman's refutation of
Margaret Mead's conclusions of 1928 as "unscientific" was put to
the vote and passed unanimously!
Samoans had long suspected Mead must
have been hoaxed, but exactly how she came to be so wrong remained
a mystery. Freeman had given up hope of meeting any first-hand
informants to shed light on this, but in November 1987, after
arriving in Samoa to make a documentary film, he was astonished to
be unexpectedly introduced to a dignified 86 year-old lady of rank
who had been one of Mead's two companions in 1926. She was in full
possession of her faculties, and had returned to her home in
Manu'a after living in Hawaii for many years. She gave sworn and
filmed testimony, detailing the fateful hoax, as described above.
The accuracy of her memory was later confirmed by rigorous
testing.
Could
this be documented?
Freeman says "…The point had been
reached where there could be no avoiding this question: 'What,
in fact, actually happened during Margaret Mead's brief sojourn in
the remote islands of Manu'a in the mid-1920s!'. For me, this
question demanded systematic investigation. Issues of great
anthropological significance were manifestly involved". Gaining
access to Mead's records and masses of documents, he reconstructed
a detailed chronology of events, and found Mead's letter written
to Boas on 14th March 1926, the day after the hoax.
For the 1996 premier of David
Williamson's play Heretic, which dramatised this story,
Freeman's 1983 book was re-issued as Margaret Mead and the
Heretic: The making and unmaking of an anthropological myth.
In a new 8-page Foreword, quoting Sir Geoffrey Elton, Freeman
said: "It is the historian's duty to put myths in their proper
place (which is in the discard) regardless of what some people may
feel about it".
Freeman continued:
"Moreover, we are dealing with one
of the most remarkable events in the intellectual history of the
twentieth century. Margaret Mead, the historical evidence
demonstrates, was comprehensively hoaxed by her Samoan
informants, and then, in her turn, by convincing Franz Boas,
Ruth Benedict and others of the 'genuineness' of her account of
Samoa, she unwittingly misled the entire anthropological
establishment, as well as the intelligentsia at large, including
such sharp-minded sceptics as Bertrand Russell and H.L. Mencken.
That a Polynesian prank should have produced such a spectacular
result in centres of higher learning throughout the western
world is wonderfully comic. But behind the comedy there is a
chastening reality. It is now apparent that for decade after
decade in universities and college lecture rooms throughout the
western world students were misinformed about an issue of
fundamental importance by professors who, placing credence in
Mead's conclusion of 1928, had themselves become cognitively
deluded."
Martin Orans, an American professor of
anthropology, after studying Mead's field notes, but not the other
relevant historical materials, concluded in 1996, as had Freeman,
that Mead's work in Samoa was both "profoundly unscientific" and
"seriously flawed". Yet, so great was his reluctance to believe
Freeman's historical analysis that he still argued that she could
not possibly have been hoaxed. But this left only the unlikely
alternative explanation that she had deliberately lied - a notion
which Freeman (1999b) unhesitatingly rejects.
At last, any doubts that Mead was
hoaxed have been decisively settled by Freeman's unearthing of one
more first-hand account. It is by Mead herself! She wrote that on
the island of Ofu, on the occasion described above, her
relationship with the two Samoan "girls" had become so close that
she was able "receive their whispered confidences, and learn at
the same time the answer to the scientists' questions". Mead
published these revealing words in New York in 1931 in Life as
a Samoan Girl in All True! The Record of Actual Adventures
That Have Happened to Ten Women of Today. Freeman's (1999b)
refutation of Orans' thesis has been accepted for publication in
Current Anthropology.
Conclusion
In his 80s, Freeman has seen the
Samoan controversy settled decisively in his favour. At a meeting
of the American Association of Anthropologists in December 1998,
his new book was on display. Its significance will take time to
digest. It concludes with a call for anthropologists to abandon
pre-scientific, anti-evolutionary ideologies, and recognise the
rapidly accumulating evidence of evolutionary biology. This shows
that "all humans, belonging as they do to the same species, have
the same phylogenetically given human nature, with their differing
cultures having come into being during quite recent times, through
the varying exercise of choice. Our biologically given capacity
for choice is then of enormous human significance." Nature and
nurture interact, but we should never disregard our biological
heritage, which is becoming more and more fully understood.
In 1983 (before any evidence of the
hoax) Freeman wrote (p.292,):
"We are confronted in the case of
Margaret Mead's Samoan researches with an instructive example of
how, as evidence is sought to substantiate a cherished doctrine,
the deeply held beliefs of those involved may lead them
unwittingly into error. The danger of such as outcome is
inherent, it would seem, in the very process of belief
formation…" … "A crucial issue that arises from this historic
case for the discipline of anthropology, which has tended to
accept the reports of ethnographers as entirely empirical
statements, is the extent to which other ethnographic accounts
may have been distorted by doctrinal convictions, as well as the
methodological question of how such distortion can best be
avoided. These are no small problems."
Boas and Mead were rightly driven by a
sense of urgency to document pre-industrial societies before they
were changed for ever by contact with Western influences (though
missionaries had been in Samoa for a century, and Freeman was able
to check his findings with their records). But to what extent did
doctrinaire cultural determinism affect the validity of other
observations by Mead and like-minded colleagues, if they were made
and interpreted through the spectacles and perspectives of this
ideology which deliberately excluded the evolutionary
understandings which today are the foundation of all biological
sciences? How many more Meadian "hunches" are waiting to be
unravelled, if we ask such questions as: "Who said so? How did
they know? Does it make sense? Is there a catch somewhere?" There
is evidently need for much careful unravelling of the Boas-Mead
legacy in the social sciences.
It is fitting that, before we move
into the 21st Century, Freeman has provided the evidence to
consign the myth supporting the ideology of cultural determinism
to the dustbin of history. Mary Lefkowitz, Professor in the
Humanities of Wellesley College, Massachusetts, concluded: "…Both
anthropologists and everyone who cares about truth should regard
Freeman (rather than Mead) as a 'culture hero for our times'".
References
1. Conway, JK (1994) Written by
Herself: Autobiographies of American Women - an anthology.
London, Vintage, p.284-5.
2. Freeman D. (1983) Margaret Mead
and Samoa: the making and unmaking of an anthropological myth.
Harvard University Press.
3. Freeman D. (1996) Margaret Mead
and the Heretic: the making and unmaking of an anthropological
myth. Ringwood Victoria. Penguin. This is the 1983 book, as
above, re-issued with a new 8-page Foreword in 1996 to coincide
with the world premier in Sydney of David Williamson's play
Heretic.
4. Freeman D. (1996) 'The debate,
at heart, is about evolution'. In The certainty of doubt: in
Tributes to Peter Munz. Eds. Fairburn M and Oliver WH. Wellington.
Victoria University Press.
5. Freeman D. (1999a) The fateful
hoaxing of Margaret Mead: a historical analysis of her Samoan
research. Westview Press, Colorado, USA, (but see the
paperback revised edition, containing the final 1931 confirmation
by Mead herself, which Freeman had not yet discovered when the
hardback first edition went to press!)
6. Freeman D. (1999b) Was Margaret
Mead misled or did she mislead on Samoa? Forthcoming in
Current Anthropology.
7. Mead M (1931) "Life as a Samoan
girl", in All true! The record of actual adventures that have
happened to ten women of today. New York, Brewer, Warren & Putnam.
8. Mead M (1977) Sex and
Temperament in Three Primitive Societies. London, Routledge &
Kegan Paul, 1977, p.288. First published 1935.
9. Mead M. (1950) Male and Female.
Harmondsworth, Penguin. First published 1949.
10. Orans M. (1996) Not even wrong:
Margaret Mead, Derek Freeman and the Samoans. Novato,
California.
11. Watson JB (1928) Psychological
Care of the Infant and Child. New York, Norton, pp.47-47.
Acknowledgment
This article has been checked for
accuracy by Derek Freeman, but responsibility for the text lies
with the author.
Copyright © Peter S. Cook Sydney,
1999. This article may be freely reproduced in whole or in part,
with acknowledgement.
http://www.newsweekly.com.au/books/0813336937.html
Dr Peter S. Cook, M.B.,Ch.B.(NZ).,
F.R.A.N.Z.C.P., M.R.C.Psych, Consultant Psychiatrist (retired),
62 Greycliffe St, Queenscliff NSW 2096, Australia. Email:
pcook62@optusnet.com.au |