<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<record
    xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim http://www.loc.gov/standards/marcxml/schema/MARC21slim.xsd"
    xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim">

  <leader>03175cam a22003613u 4500</leader>
  <controlfield tag="001">77181</controlfield>
  <controlfield tag="003">UtSlPG</controlfield>
  <controlfield tag="005">20260610134804.0</controlfield>
  <controlfield tag="006">m</controlfield>
  <controlfield tag="007">cr n</controlfield>
  <controlfield tag="008">260607r20251928utu|||||o|||||||||||||| d</controlfield>
  <datafield tag="010" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">28029158</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">UtSlPG</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="041" ind1=" " ind2="7">
    <subfield code="a">en</subfield>
    <subfield code="2">iso639-1</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="050" ind1=" " ind2="4">
    <subfield code="a">GN</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="100" ind1="1" ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">Boas, Franz,</subfield>
    <subfield code="d">1858-1942</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="245" ind1="1" ind2="0">
    <subfield code="a">Anthropology and modern life</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1">
    <subfield code="a">Salt Lake City, UT :</subfield>
    <subfield code="b">Project Gutenberg,</subfield>
    <subfield code="c">2025</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">1 online resource :</subfield>
    <subfield code="b">multiple file formats</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">text</subfield>
    <subfield code="b">txt</subfield>
    <subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">computer</subfield>
    <subfield code="b">c</subfield>
    <subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">online resource</subfield>
    <subfield code="b">cr</subfield>
    <subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="500" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">Release date is 2025-11-05</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">What is anthropology? -- The problem of race -- The interrelation of races -- Nationalism -- Eugenics -- Criminology -- Stability of culture -- Education -- Modern civilization and primitive culture.</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="508" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">Sean/IB@DP</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">"Anthropology and Modern Life" by Franz Boas is a scientific treatise written in the early 20th century. It argues that anthropological insight clarifies modern social problems&#x2014;especially race, nationalism, eugenics, crime, and education&#x2014;by showing how culture and environment, not innate racial heredity, shape human differences. Drawing on empirical critique of popular errors and testing practices, it challenges biological determinism and urges policy guided by rigorous, culture-centered analysis.

The opening of the work redefines anthropology as the study of humans in groups, focusing on how bodily, physiological, and mental traits are distributed and molded by social conditions rather than by individual &#x201C;types.&#x201D; It then dismantles common ideas about race: most traits vary within populations, visible &#x201C;types&#x201D; are subjective, heredity acts along family lines, environment can slightly alter form, and differences (including brain size) overlap so much that they do not index intelligence. Test scores and behaviors, Boas shows, reflect training, language, and circumstance more than innate capacity, and ethnology consistently finds cultural patterns cutting across bodily types. Turning to race consciousness, he calls it a learned habit of closed societies, reinforced by visible markers and law; intermarriage patterns follow power and norms, not instinct, with contemporary color-based assortative mating among Black Americans producing predictable shifts. He urges mixing children&#x2019;s social groups and judging migrants and mates by individual and family qualities rather than racial labels. Finally, he distinguishes nation from nationality, rejects myths of pure &#x201C;Aryan&#x201D; or national races, notes Europe&#x2019;s deep intermixture, explains why language alone cannot found a nation, and points toward a federation of nations serving shared human aims. (This is an automatically generated summary.)</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="534" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="p">Originally published:</subfield>
    <subfield code="c">New York: W. W. Norton &amp; Company, Inc., 1928</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="653" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">Social problems</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="653" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">Anthropology</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="653" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="a">Race</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="856" ind1="4" ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="u">https://archive.org/details/anthropologymode0000unse_b7z0/page/n5/mode/2up</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="856" ind1="4" ind2="0">
    <subfield code="u">https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77181</subfield>
  </datafield>
  <datafield tag="999" ind1=" " ind2=" ">
    <subfield code="c">117902</subfield>
    <subfield code="d">117902</subfield>
  </datafield>
</record>
