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Family Trees and Timber Rights: Albert E. Jenks, Americanization, and
the Rise of Anthropology at the University of Minnesota1
Mark Soderstrom
University of Minnesota
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Hindsight allows present-day scholars
to view the development of academic disciplines in a light that
contemporaries would never have seen. Hence, from our perspective,
Mary Furner's assertion that anthropology developed as a profession
reacting against biology and the physical sciences makes sense,2
for we tend to celebrate the triumph of cultural anthropology
as the coming of age of the discipline.3
However, this trajectory of professional development was not a
necessary or predestined development. Rather, the eventual (if
occasionally still embattled) predominance of culture over the
categories of race, nation, and biology was only one of many possible
outcomes. This paper investigates a different trajectory, one
that most current scholars would hope has been relegated to the
dustbin of history. It is still a cautionary tale, though, in
that while the racial anthropology followed in this narrative
did not survive World War II, its practitioners did enjoy a degree
of prominence and influence that was much greater and longer than
has been generally acknowledged by current accounts.
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In one such account, a 1990 history
of anthropology at the University of Minnesota, Professor Elden
Johnson delineates the separation of the Anthropology and Sociology
Departments in 1918, and remarks on the newly-independent department's
1919 catalog. Johnson only considers six of the twenty-two courses
listed to be truly "anthropology courses," stating that the rest
of the fledgling department's offerings were merely practical
courses taught by social activists whose anthropology was at best
questionable.4
His determinations are intriguing, since the man who designed
and taught many of the disputed courses„Albert E. Jenks, founder
and head of the department„enjoyed statewide and national prominence
in his field. Jenks, as the man primarily responsible for the
inception and early shape of the University of Minnesota Anthropology
Department, merits a closer look. His use of emerging methods
in physical anthropology to manage populations, secure property,
and reify racial hierarchy, were part and parcel of the race-based
nationalism then prevalent in American intellectual life. Such
racial thought formed the disciplinary base of anthropology. Jenks's
life and career provide a useful lens through which to examine
the evolution of anthropology as a discipline within its national
context.
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