Claude Levi Strauss was a renowned French anthropologist of the twentieth century who pioneered the theory of structuralism
@Anthropologists, Birthday and Childhood
Claude Levi Strauss was a renowned French anthropologist of the twentieth century who pioneered the theory of structuralism
Claude Lévi-Strauss born at
Levi-Strauss married Dina Dreyfus in the year 1932 but the marriage ended in divorce and the couple had no children.
Rose-Marie Ullmo was his second wife whom he married in the year 1946. Although the marriage culminated in a divorce Levi Strauss was blessed with a son named Laurent.
In the year 1954, he married Monique Roman and the couple had a son named Matthieu.
Claude Levi-Strauss was born on November 28, 1908 in Brussels, Belgium in a Jewish family of French origin. His father Raymond Levi-Strauss was a painter while his mother Emma looked after the household.
When Claude was quite young his family moved to Paris and it was in the huge metropolis that he grew up. The family lived in a house that was situated in a locality named after the well-known artist Claude Lorrain; someone who inspired the young lad when he grew up.
He attended two schools- ‘Lycee Janson De Sally’ and ‘Lycee Condocret’- before he went up to study at one of the best universities in France, Sorbonne in the year 1927.
At the Sorbonne, he obtained a degree in philosophy although he had also studied law. He graduated in the year 1932 and after working as a school teacher in Paris for some time, he went to the ‘University of Sao Paolo’ in Brazil to serve as sociology professor two years later.
Claude Levi-Strauss lived in Brazil for four years between 1935 and 1939, during which he worked at the ‘University of Sao Paolo’. During that time he did a lot of ethnographic research with his wife Dina, who was an ethnographer herself. The couple made regular forays into the Amazon rainforests for their research.
In the year 1941, he joined the ‘New School for Social Research’ located in New York as a visiting professor and worked there for four years. At this particular institution, the well-known linguist Roman Jakobson worked as part of the faculty as well and Levi-Strauss was greatly inspired by his knowledge.
At the completion of the 2nd World War Levi-Strauss stayed back in the United States and worked in the French Embassy situated in Washington DC between 1946 and 1948, before returning to France.
In the year 1948, Claude returned to Paris and submitted two theses at Sorbonne. In the same year he was awarded his doctorate degree by France’s ‘Sorbonne University’.
In the year 1950, he was made the director of studies of the ‘École Pratique des Hautes Études’, at ‘Paris University’, which translates as ‘religious section’. He worked there for more than two decades and it was during that he started working on his first popular work ‘Tristes Tropques’.
In the year 1955, Claude Levi-Strauss published his first book titled ‘Tristes Tropques’ or ‘A World On the Wane’ that chronicled his time in the US during the war and was regarded as literary gem by many in Parisian society.
In 1961, this eminent ethnologist published his masterpiece on structural anthropology titled ‘Structural Anthropology’ that firmly established him as one of the most prominent scholars in the subject.