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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL
December 28, '892~ctober Z 0, ~ 974
BY ANTHONY F. C. WALLACE
IN THE YEARS immediately following Work! War II,
the University of Pennsylvania committed itself to the
expansion of its Department of Anthropology. At the war's
end, Frank G. Speck remained as the sole senior professor,
aider! on a part-time basis by graduate student instructors
and sundry curators from the University Museum. Speck
callecl back his former student, Loren Eiseley, from Oberlin,
as chairman, and Eiseley and Speck together persuaded
their former colleague, A. Irving Hallowell, to return from
Northwestern. Speck, Eiseley, ant! Hallowell then set out to
create what has become one of the country's major depart-
ments of anthropology.
The few graduate students who were in resilience at the
time of Hallowell's arrival in ~ 948 knew him primarily as one
of the founclers of the new field of "culture and personality."
He was particularly noted for his use of the Rorschach, or
ink-blot, test to assess the personality structures of American
Indian populations. This innovation in the use of projective
techniques made him something of a controversial figure, for
many anthropologists including his own mentor, Speck
were not especially in favor of the kind of clinical approach
to the study of human society that the use of such tools as the
Rorschach seemed to imply. But as we came to know him as
195
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196
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
a teacher and Divisor, we students realized that "the Ror-
schach" was only a single aspect of Hallowell's extraordinarily
rich mode of approach to the study of man. He brought to
bear on his chosen subjects the Ojibwa Indians of the
United States and Canada not only the concepts and tools
of clinical psychology, but also the traditional ethnographic
and linguistic skills he had learned from Speck and other
teachers in the school of Franz Boas, the techniques of func-
iional analysis that were being introduced by the social an-
thropolog~sts, and a trained capacity for historical and schol-
arly analysis. 'rhis variety of intellectual resources made his
explorations of Ojibwa society at once precisely descriptive
and richly evocative models for emulation by others working
in other communities. Hallowell was, incleecI, one of the prin-
cipal figures in the development of modern ethnography,
which is distinguished by its effort to combine detailed! de-
scription in standardized categories of overt observable be-
havior (the "etic" approach) with careful attention to the need
to infer the more-or-less covert cognitive ant] emotional
structures of the people being observed (the "emic" ap-
proach).
EDUCATION
The diversity of professional abilities that Hallowell
brought to bear in teaching and research was partly owing to
an eclectic sort of educational career. His parents, Edgar
Lloyc! ant! Dorothy Ecisall Hallowell, were According to
HallowelI) of a "conservative" inclination, ant! perceiving in
their son "no outstanding talents" or "professional" interest,
sent him to a three-year manual training high school and
then to college at the Wharton School of Finance and Com-
merce at the University of Pennsylvania. The Wharton
School at that time, before World War I, offered a broad
curriculum not only in business courses but also in the social
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ALFRED IRVI NG HALLOWELL 197
sciences, and furthermore required its students to take liberal
arts courses outside the school itself. So Hallowell studied, in
addition to technical subjects necessary to a business edu-
cation, all the courses in economics and sociology that were
offered ant! sampler! such topics as chemistry, history, En-
glish literature, ant! Italian Renaissance painting. This expo-
sure to the liberal arts and to the atmosphere of social reform
fed the fires of rebellion against conservative family values
ant! cultivated what he later characterized as his "socialistic
inclinations." Plans to enter upon a business career were lair!
aside, and unable to finch funds to finance a graduate ecluca-
tion in sociology, Hallowell went into social work as a case-
worker for the Family Society. This experience brought him
into contact with poverty and into the houses of unfamiliar
ethnic groups, black and white.
During his social work years Hallowell continued to take
courses in sociology. He was also exposed to the new ideas of
psychoanalysis through the lectures of the anthropologist
Alexander Goldenweiser at the Pennsylvania School of Social
Work. And he took some courses with an old friend and
fellow fraternity member from undergraduate days, Frank
G. Speck, who was now teaching anthropology at the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania. Speck's lectures opened his eyes to a
wide vista of cultures, "far beyond] the ethnic groups in my
own back yard," ant! he decided to leave social work for
anthropology. He took an M.A. in anthropology in 1920 and
a Ph.D. in 1924. He entered upon the stage as a full-fledge(i
follower of the school of Franz Boas, who had briefly taught
both Speck and Hallowell in his seminar at Columbia and
whose abstract conception of anthropology as the Science of
Man in all his aspects, physical, psychological, linguistic, and
cultural seemec! to provide that broad base that was requires!
to transcend provincial American culture ant! acIdress the
basic problems of social reform.
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198
B I OGRA P H I C A L M E M O I RS
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND CONTRIBUTIONS
Hallowell's doctoral dissertation was "Bear Ceremonial-
ism in the Northern Hemisphere" and was published as a
whole issue of the Amen can Anthropologist in 1926. This work
brought together (lata from northern Europe, Asia, and
North America to reveal the existence of a complex system of
beliefs and ceremonies about the bear which were, in varying
local expressions, almost universally practiced among primi-
tive peoples in the circumboreal culture area. He also drew
attention to archaeological remains from the Paleolithic
which indicated an extraordinary antiquity, on the order of
tens of thousands of years, for this widely-diffused culture
complex. The work remains a classic contribution to culture
history.
But Hallowell was not satisfied with the role of compara-
tive ethnologist, which would require more work in the li-
brary than in the fiel(l, and so after some casting about, in the
late 920's he began that series of studies of northern AIgon-
kian life and culture which he was to continue for the re-
mainder of his professional career. His works on the Abenaki
of Quebec, the Montagnais-Naskapi of Labrador, and partic-
ularly the Saulteaux or Ojibwa of the Lake Winnipeg region
were significant not merely in providing a rich ant! intimate
portrait of one of the few remaining hunting-and-gathering
cultures in North America, but also because the Ojibwa
papers and monographs revealed his theoretical ant! meth-
oclological innovations which, because they could be applied
in any ethnographic setting, were of general interest to an-
thropologists. One of the tragedies of his professional life was
the loss in the mails of the only copy of the final summary of
the Ojibwa ethnology which Hallowell wrote during his emer-
itus years and which his deteriorating health prevented him
from (loin" over again.
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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL
199
The Ojibwa series (which follower! one paper on the Abe-
naki and one on the Montagnais-Naskapi) began in 1934 and
by the time of Hallowell's death amounted to about forty
individual papers, articles, chapters, and one monograph
(The Role of Conjuring in Saulteaux Society, 1942~. The works
cover virtually all aspects of Ojibwa culture kinship and
social organization, economics and technology, ecological re-
lationships (particularly as they affected lane! tenure), social
control, values and morality, medicine, religion, folklore,
temporal and spatial orientation, cireams, sexual behavior—
and deal in addition with factors of personality structure,
mental health, and culture change. Taken together, they con-
stitute one of the most complete recordings of the changing
way of life of a hunting-and-gathering population that is
available in the ethnographic record.
The theoretical and methodological issues addressed in
the Ojibwa series shifted, over the years, from strictly ethno-
logical matters to those involving psychological considera-
tions. The initial stimulus was a classic but conventional-
question concerning the relation between kinship terminol-
ogy and rules of marriage. The older evolutionary theorists
of the nineteenth century had postulated a close connection
between the two, but more recent opinion, as advanced by
Boas ant! his students, questioned the tightness of the cou-
pling and suggested that changes in kin terms were linguistic
rather than sociological phenomena. After discovering evi-
dence in some oIcl dictionaries to suggest that the northern
AIgonkians might in fact once have practiced cross-cousin
marriage (as their surviving cousin terminology wouIc! have
suggested to an evolutionist), Hallowell read a paper asking,
"Was Cross-Cousin Marriage Practiced by the North-Central
AIgonkian?" This paper received no support and a very crit-
ical appraisal. But learning that another ethnologist hac! re-
cently found Naskapi men actually marrying their mother's
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200
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
brother's daughters, Hallowell was spurred to visit a related
AIgonkian group, the Saulteaux (Ojibwa) of the Lake Winni-
peg region to learn for himself. In his brief autobiography
(1972), Hallowell recorcled one of the classic native answers
to a field worker's apparently naive question:
I well remember an early conversation with William Berens, my closest
collaborator. I hesitatingly asked him whether a man could marry a woman
he called ninam (female cross-cousin). His reply was, "Who the hell else
would he marry?"
And throughout the series occur reports on material culture,
the size of hunting territories as a function of ecological ad-
justment, the role of conjuring and the decline of native
ceremonies, folktales, ant! various other necessary, if conven-
tional, parts of standard ethnography.
But increasingly the topics dealt with psychological ques-
tions. Hallowell's interests in this area included, but extencled
beyoncl, the field of "personality and culture," which con-
cerns itself primarily with the relation between the motiva-
tional structure of inclivicluals, couched more or less in the
language of psychoanalysis and clinical psychology, and the
culture of their group as the ethnographer describes it. In his
view, the entire field of psychology was potentially relevant to
the concerns of anthropology, and so he was eager to take
advantage of the findings and methods of learning theory, of
gestalt psychology, of the test-and-measurement filid, ant] of
the newer work in perception which emphasized the impor-
tance of the social ant! cultural characteristics of the perceiver
in determining what is perceived and known. His writings on
the phenomenology of perception of space and time among
the Ojibwa were read and cited frequently by psychologists
who were eager for confirmation of their finclings in cross-
cultural research. In a very real sense, Hallowell completed
one of the tasks which Boas. with great prescience, had fore-
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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL
20
seen as theoretically central not only for anthropology but
also for science as a whole. The early physicist Boas, trained
in psychophysics to study how the observer's characteristics
determine his perception of experimental phenomena, had
generalized this Kantian view of epistemology to include a
concern with the way in which the "genius of a people" deter-
mines their perception of the material world, of the cultural
repertoire presented to them for acceptance by their neigh-
bors, and even of themselves. In his work on the cultural
determinants of perception, Hallowell thus carried forward
the investigation of one of the great problems of epistemol-
ogy and of the philosophy of science.
With his abiding interest in the subject of perception, it is
perhaps not surprising that Hallowell shouIc! turn to tests of
perception the so-called projective techniques and partic-
ularly to the Rorschach test as his favored technique of assess-
ing indiviclual Ojibwa personalities. He collected a series of
266 Rorschach records from various Ojibwa communities,
and although he never prepared an over-all summary of the
results in the form of a sketch of typical Ojibwa personality
structures, he used the data in a number of papers, including
both those descriptive of Ojibwa cases and those explicating
the use of the Rorschach test in cross-cultural research. He
encourages! his students to use the Rorschach for compara-
tive studies; my own dissertation research involving the use of
Rorschach protocols was concluctec! under his guidance.
Undoubtedly the best known and most controversial of
Hallowell's works on Ojibwa personality were those in which
he (lescribed an aboriginal personality type an isolate(l,
tightly controlled, atomistic individual well adapted to the
hunter's life failing to change, except pathologically, under
the stress of acculturation, particularly in reservation cir-
cumstances. This notion of"psychological lag" is, in a formal
way, not unlike the so-called "doctrine of survivals," which in
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202
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
more sophisticated form is sometimes invoker! in analyzing
the functional relations among changes in kinship terminol-
ogy, marriage rule, and rules of residence ant! crescent. Crit-
ical attacks on the iclea of the aborig~nality of the family
hunting territory among the northern AIgonkians (which
Speck had originates! and to which he hac! contributed) and
a wholesale assault on the image of the northern hunters as
"atomistic," resting in part on the claim that his views were
based on a refusal to accept the Marx/Engels theory of cul-
tural evolution, left him unmoved.
In his mature years, Hallowell clevelopec! further his ideas
about the nature of the human personality and began to
construct a theory of psychological evolution. Invoking again
the theme of the self as perceiver, he posed the problem: at
what point in human cultural evolution did man become an
object to himself? Such a transformation he viewed as crucial,
for only with this perceptual reflexivity is a moral, ant! there-
fore human, social order conceivable. Anthropology itself he
finally came to view as one more step in the long evolutionary
process of man becoming aware of man.
POSITIONS, SERVICES, AND HONORS
Hallowell's initial academic appointment was as instructor
in anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania from ~ 923
to 1928. Successive promotions followed; he became full pro-
fessor in 1939. Thereafter, apart from the years spent at
Northwestern from 1944 to 1947, Hallowell remained in res-
iclence as Professor of Anthropology at the University of
Pennsylvania until his retirement in 1963. Ant} even after
that he maintained a busy office in the department, where he
conductec! business for the National Academy of Sciences
and counseled students and colleagues. During his emeritus
years he was sought after as a teacher on a number of cam-
puses, including Wisconsin and Chatham College, and
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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL
203
formed a particularly strong connection at Bryn Mawr,
where he taught regularly ant! helped to supervise clisserta-
tions until a few years before his death.
He also served various institutions in other capacities. At
the University of Pennsylvania he held the positions of Cura-
tor of Social Anthropology in the University Museum and of
Professor of Anthropology in Psychiatry in the Medical
School. He served as Chairman of the Division of Anthropol-
ogy and Psychology in the National Research Council from
1946 to 1949, as President of the American Anthropological
Association in 1949, and as President of the American Folk-
lore Society and the Society for Personality Assessment. He
editec! the Wenner-Gren Foundation's monographs series,
the Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology, from 1950
to 1956.
Among his honors and awards may be mentioner! his
election to the National Academy of Sciences in 1961 and to
the American Philosophical Society in 1963. He was awarded
a Guggenheim Fellowship in ~ 940, received the Viking
Meclal for outstanding achievement in anthropology in ~ 956,
and was accorded! an honorary Doctor of Science degree
from the University of Pennsylvania on his retirement in
1963. In ~ 965 a Festschrift was published in his honor, eclitec!
by Melford Spiro and entitled Context and Meaning in Cultural
Anthropology.
PERSONAL STYLE
During the years when T knew him as student ant! col-
league, Hallowell lived in a comfortable oIc! frame house in a
woodsy suburb of Philadelphia. There he and his wife,
Maude, on occasion entertained students, faculty, and visi-
tors to the area at small gatherings where the talk revolved
around personality structure ant! its assessment, psychocul-
tural evolution, and other psychologically oriented aspects of
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204
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
anthropology. Hallowell was enthusiastic in conversation and
encouraged students to argue and debate him. On occasion
he could be testy, however, and it was said by awes! graduate
students that he invariably took a negative position to any
new proposal submitted to his judgment but that he generally
worked his way around to approval of it two days later. In
lecturing, as in writing, Hallowell liked to surround the
points he macle in clear academic prose with a thicket of
allusions to the literature, so that lecture notes and published
papers alike bristled with footnotes and bibliographical
asides. The style of all this was, however, more sprightly than
pedantic, and in personal conversation the apparatus of
scholarship was replaced by a func! of humorous but illustra-
tive anecdotes. Although he set high stanciarcis of scholarship
for himself and his students, he regarded the machinery of
examinations and dissertations more as a developmental pro-
cess than as a series of hurdles to exclude the unworthy. ~ well
recall his remark after ~ hac! completed my dissertation
(uncler his supervision): "I'm going to tell you what Frank
told me when ~ finished my dissertation. Now that you've got
that out of the way, you can get to work."
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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL
BIBLIOGRAPHY
205
This bibliography of the writings of A. I. Hallowell is a combination,
with slight modification, of two bibliographies previously published in the
two volumes of his collected works: Culture and Experience (Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1955; paperback reprint with new pref-
ace by Hallowell, Schocken Books, 1974) and Contrzbu~ons to Anthropology:
Selected Papers of A. Irving Hallowell, edited by Raymond D. Fogelson
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976~. The later work also contains
a brief autobiographical memoir; the former, several previously unpub-
lished papers, which are noted in the bibliography.
1921
Indian corn hills. Am. Anthropol., 23:233.
1922
Two folk tales from Nyasaland (Bantu Texts). }. Am. Folk-Lore,
35:216-18.
1924
Anthropology and the social worker's perspective. The Family,
5:88-92.
1926
Bear ceremonialism in the northern hemisphere. Am. Anthropol.,
27:1-175.
Following the footsteps of prehistoric man. General Magazine and
Historical Chronicle, Univ. of Pennsylvania, 28:117-22.
1928
Recent historical changes in the kinship terminology of the St.
Francis Abenaki. Proceedings, Twenty-second International
Congress of Americanists (Rome), 97-145.
Was cross-cousin marriage practiced by the North-Central Algon-
kian? Proceedings, Twenty-third International Congress of
Americanists (New York), 519~4.
1929
The physical characteristics of the Indians of Labrador. I. Soc.
Americanistes Paris, Nouvelle Serie, 21:337-71.
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206
Anthropology in the university curriculum. The General Mag-
azine and Historical Chronicle, Univ. of Pennsylvania, 32:
47-54.
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
.
.
1930
[Editorial comments; the results of the Safe Harbor "Dig." Bull.,
Soc. Pa. Archaeol., 1.
1932
Kinship terms and cross-cousin marriage of the Montagnais-
Naskapi and the Creel Am. Anthropol., 34:171-99.
Foreword to Henry Lorne Masta, Abenaki Indian legends. Gram-
mar and Place Names, Victoriaville, P.Q., Canada, 9-12.
1934
Some empirical aspects of northern Saulteaux religion. Am. An-
thropol., 36:673-74.
Culture and mental disorder. l. Abnorm. Soc. Psychol., 29:1-9.
1935
The bulked enema syringe in North America. Am. Anthropol.,
37:708-10.
Notes on the northern range of Zizania in Manitoba. Rhodora,
37:365~8.
Two Indian portraits. The Beaver, No. 3, Outfit 226:18-19.
1936
Psychic stresses and culture patterns. Am. }. Psych., 92:1291-1310.
The passing of the Midewiwin in the Lake Winnipeg region. Am.
Anthropol., 38:32-51.
Anthropology yesterday and today. Sigma Xi Quarterly, 24:
161~9.
Two Indian portraits. The Beaver, No. 1, Outfit 267:24-25.
1937
Temporal orientation in western civilization and in preliterate
society. Am. Anthropol., 39:647-70.
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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL
207
Cross-cousin marriage in the Lake Winnipeg area. Twenty-fifth
Anniversary Studies (Philadelphia Anthropological Soc.),
95-100.
Introduction. "Handbook of Psychological Leads for Ethnological
Field Workers," prepared for the Committee on Culture and
Personality (Chairman, Edward Sapir), National Research
Council. Mimeographed, 60 pp. For printed versions see Per-
sonal Character and Cultural Milieu, pp. 257-303, a collection of
readings, compiled by D. G. Haring (Ann Arbor, Mich.: Ed-
wards Brothers, 1948~; The Study of Personality, pp. 264-308, a
book of readings compiled by Howard Brand (New York: John
Wiley, 1954~.
1938
Fear and anxiety as cultural and individual variables in a primitive
society. I. Soc. Psychol., 9:25-47.
Shabwan: a dissocial Indian girl. Am. I. Orthopsychiatry,8:32~40.
The incidence, character and decline of polygamy among the Lake
Winnipeg Cree and Saulteaux. Am. Anthropol., 40:235-56.
Notes on the material culture of the Island Lake Saulteaux. I. Soc.
Americanistes Paris, Nouvelle Serie, 30:129~40.
Freudian symbolism in the dream of a Saulteaux Indian. Man,
38 :47~8.
Review, Tom Harrison, savage civilization. Annals (American
Academy of Political and Social Science), 196:264~5.
1939
Sin, sex and sickness in Saulteaux belief. Br. I. Med. Psychol.,
18:191-97.
The child, the savage and human experience. Proceedings, Sixth
Institute on the Exceptional Child (The Woods Schools, Lang-
horne, Pa.), 8-34. Reprinted in: Personal Character and Cultural
Milieu, pp. 304-30, compiled by D. G. Haring (1948~.
Some European folktales of the Berens River Saulteaux. }. Am.
Folk-Lore, 52: 155-79.
With Dorothy M. Spencer. Anthropology. In: Volume Library, ed. R.
Webster, pp. 95-110. N.Y.: The Educators Association.
Growing up—savage and civilized. National Parent-Teacher,
34~4~:32-34.
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208
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
1940
Aggression in Saulteaux society. Psychiatry, 3:395-407. Reprinted
in: Personality in Nature, Society and Culture, ed. Clyde Kluckhohn
and H. A. Murray, pp. 204-19 (N.Y.: Alfred A. Knopf, 1948~.
Spirits of the dead in Saulteaux life and thought. l. R. Anthropol.
Inst., 70:2~51.
Magic: the role of conjuring in Saulteaux society (papers presented
before the Monday night group, 1939-1940~. Institute of
Human Relations, Yale Univ.
1941
With Leslie Spier and Stanley S. Newman, eds. Language, Culture
and Personality: Essays in Memory of Edward Sapir. Menasha, Wisc.:
Sapir Memorial Publication Fund.
The special function of anxiety in a primitive society. Am. Sociolog.
Rev., 7:869~1. Reprinted in: Personal Character and Cultural
Milieu, pp. 331-43, compiled by D. G. Haring (1948~.
Psychology and anthropology. Proceedings of the Eighth Ameri-
can Scientific Congress (Wash., D.C.), 2:291-45.
The Rorschach method as an aid in the study of personalities in
primitive societies. Character and Personality, 9:23~45.
The Rorschach test as a tool for investigating cultural variables and
individual differences in the study of personality in primitive
societies. Rorschach Research Exchange, 5:31-34. (A prospec-
tus written prior to collection of first Rorschach protocols in
1938.)
1942
The Role of Corljurang in Saulteaux Society. Philadelphia: Univ. Penn-
sylvania Press. xiv + 96 pp.
Acculturation processes and personality changes as indicated by the
Rorschach technique. Rorschach Research Exchange, 6:42-50.
Reprinted in: Personality in Nature, Society and Culture, ed. Clyde
Kluckhohn and H. A. Murray, pp. 34(}46 (1948~.
Some psychological aspects of measurement among the Saulteaux.
Am. Anthropol., 44:62~7.
Some reflections on the nature of religion. Crozer Quarterly, 19:
26~77.
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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL
209
With E. L. Reynolds. Biological factors in family structure. In:
Mamage and the Family, ed. H. Becker and R. Hill, pp. 25~6.
Boston: D.C. Heath.
1943
Discussion of nativistic movements by Ralph Linton. Am. Anthro-
pol., 45:240.
The nature and functions of property as a social institution. J. Legal
Polit. Sociol., 1:115-38. Reprinted in: Morris R. Cohen and
Felix S. Cohen, Readings in Jurisprudence and Legal Philosophy, pp.
8 1 1-22 (N.Y.: Prentice-Hall 1 95 1 ).
Araucanian parallels to the Omaha kinship system. Am. Anthro-
pol., 45:489-91.
1945
Sociopsychological aspects of acculturation. In: The Science of Man
in the World Crisis, ed. R. Linton, pp. 171-200. N.Y.: Columbia
Univ. Press.
The Rorschach technique in the study of personality and culture.
Am. Anthropol., 47:195-210.
Popular responses and culture differences: an analysis based on
frequencies in a group of American Indian subjects. Rorschach
Research Exchange, 9: 153-68.
1946
Some psychological characteristics of the northeastern Indians. In:
Man in Northeastern North America, ed. F. Johnson. Papers of the
R. S. Peabody Foundation for Archeology, 3:195-225.
Concordance of Ojibwa narratives in the published work of Henry
R. Schoolcraft. I. Am. Folk-Lore, 59:136-53.
1947
Myth, culture, and personality. Am. Anthropol., 49:54~56.
1949
The size of Algonkian hunting territories, a function of ecological
adjustment. Am. Anthropol., 51:35-45.
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210
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Psychosexual adjustment, personality, and the good life in a non-
literate culture. In: Psychosexual Development in Health and Disease,
ed. Paul H. Hoch and Joseph Zubin, pp. 102-23. N.Y.: Grune
and Stratton.
1950
Personality structure and the evolution of man. Am. Anthropol.,
52: 159-73. (Presidential Address, Am. Anthropol. Assoc., Nov.
18, 1949.)
Values, acculturation and mental health. Am. I. Orthopsychiatry,
20:732-43.
1951
Cultural factors in the structuralization of perception. In: Social
Psychology at the Cross Roads, ed. }. H. Rohrer and M. Sherif, pp.
16~95. N.Y.: Harper.
Frank Gouldsmith Speck, 1881-1950. Am. Anthropol., 53:67-75.
The use of projective techniques in the study of the sociopsycho-
logical aspects of acculturation. I. Projective Techniques,
15:27-44. (Presidential Address, Society for Projective Tech-
niques, October 8, 1950.)
1952
Ojibwa personality and acculturation. In: Acculturation in the Amer'-
cas (Proceedings and Selected Papers of the Twenty-ninth Inter-
national Congress of Americanists), ed. Sol Tax, pp. 105-12.
Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.
John the bear in the New World. I. Am. Folk-Lore, 65 (258~: 418.
1953
Culture, personality and society. In: Anthropology Today, ed.
A. L. Kroeber, pp. 597-620. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.
Discussion. An Appraisal of Anthropology Today, pp. 83~7, 96,
129-30, 133, 155, 170-73, 224, 227, 332-35, 352. Chicago:
Univ. of Chicago Press.
1954
Comments on Clyde Kluckhohn. Southwestern studies of culture
and personality. Am. Anthropol., 56 (Southwest Issue):
700-703.
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ALFRED IRVING HALLOWELL 211
Psychology and anthropology. In: Far a Science of Social Man, ed.
John Gillin, pp. 160-226. N.Y.: Macmillan.
The self and its behavioural environment. Explorations, 2(April).
1955
Comments on symposium projective testing in ethnography. Am.
Anthropol., 57:262~4.
Culture and Experience. Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press.
434 pp.
-
1956
Structural and functional dimension of a human existence. Q. Rev.
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Representative terms from entire chapter:
alfred irving