Name Manning Nash | ||
Died December 12, 2001, Chicago, Illinois, United States Books The Golden Road to Modernity: Village Life in Contemporary Burma |
Manning Nash (1924 – December 12, 2001) was an anthropologist and ethnographer, professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago until his retirement in 1994, and a specialist in the study of the modernization of developing nations in Latin America and Asia. Nash conducted the first anthropological study of a factory in a Third World country, and his expertise in modernization of developing nations led to his fieldwork in Guatemala, Mexico, Burma, Iran, and Malaysia.
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Early life and education
Nash was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1924 and died in Chicago, Illinois in 2001. He married June C. Bousley in 1951. Nash received his bachelor's degree from Temple University in 1949 and his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1955.
Research and work
Nash's anthropological studies predicted the impact corporations and governments would have on people in villages around the world, which would later be referred to as third world countries.
From 1958-1963, Nash was editor of the journal on developing nations, Economic Development and Cultural Change. He served on the faculty of the University of California, Los Angeles and at the University of Washington. In the 1950s, he was one of the first anthropologists to join the faculty of a business school when he was hired to teach for the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business. Nash returned to Chicago in 1957 as an assistant professor. He became a full-time faculty member in the department of anthropology 1968, and he served as chairman of the department from 1988—1991.
- kinship - "presumed biological and descent unity of a group"
- Commensality - "the propriety of eating together"
- common cult - "a value system beyond time and empirical circumstance"