National Anthropological Archives

Guide to the Papers of Anthony Leeds, 1946-1989

Summary

Collection ID:
NAA.1994-35
Creators:
Leeds, Anthony, 1925-
Dates:
1946-1989
Languages:
Primarily
English
. Some field notes are in
Portuguese
and
Spanish
; some correspondence and documents are in
Portuguese
,
Spanish
,
French
, and
German
. There are also a number of vocabulary lists in
Yaruro
.
Physical Description:
18.37 Linear feet
32 document boxes, 2 card file boxes, one photo album, one oversize box, 2 map folders, and one document box of restricted materials.
Repository:
This collection is comprised of the professional papers of Anthony Leeds, anthropologist and university professor. Leeds' reasearch was primarily concerned with urban development, though the fieldwork included in this collection is from rural areas. Included are correspondence, field notes, published and unpublished papers, photographs, newspaper and periodical clippings, conference papers, lecture notes, syllabi, critiques of colleague and student work, and several personal documents.

Scope and Contents

Scope and Contents
This collection is comprised of the professional papers of Anthony Leeds, anthropologist and university professor. Included are correspondence, field notes, published and unpublished papers, photographs, newspaper and periodical clippings, conference papers, lecture notes, syllabi, critiques of colleague and student work, and personal documents such as calendars, biographical materials, and personal poems.
The materials in this collection reflect Leeds' field work in South America and Portugal, his role as a university professor, and his extensive involvement in various professional organizations. The majority of his anthropological endeavors focused on urban culture, the growth of technology and agriculture in society, and the philosophy behind anthropology and the social sciences. The fieldwork included in this collection is from early in his career, focusing on the study of Cacao agriculture in Brazil and the Yaruro people in Venezuela. The items in this collection document Leeds' various interests and activities.
Please note that the contents of the collection and the language and terminology used reflect the context and culture of the time of its creation. As an historical document, its contents may be at odds with contemporary views and terminology and considered offensive today. The information within this collection does not reflect the views of the Smithsonian Institution or National Anthropological Archives, but is available in its original form to facilitate research.

Arrangement

Arrangement
This collection is arranged in 7 series: (1) Correspondence, 1950-1989; (2) Research, 1949-1989; (3) Field Work, 1950-1973; (4) University, 1947-1989; (5) Professional Activities, 1951-1988; (6) Personal, 1946-1989; (7) Photo Album, circa 1952

Biographical Note

Biographical Note
Anthony Leeds was born January 26, 1925 on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Because of his parents' strong ties to Europe (both were of Jewish descent, with kin in Germany and England), Leeds spent a fair amount of his childhood in Vienna and Switzerland, where he became fluent in French and German. His father, a businessman and lawyer, died when Leeds was only three years old. Though his family returned to the United States in 1933 due to political unrest in Europe, Leeds continued to be exposed to world cultures and politics through his family. For instance, Leeds' mother was an actor, translator, and psychoanalyst who once studied at Freud's Psychoanalytic Institute in Vienna. His stepfather was not only a sculptor and musician, but also a political activist. This rich familial environment fostered an interest in the social sciences and the arts from a young age.
Leeds also got a taste for rural life when his mother moved to a working farm in Clinton Corners, New York in 1935. For the next nine years Leeds intermittently helped his mother with the farm work and attended a small high school in the area. Of his time spent at Clinton Corners, Leeds felt a strong sense of community which would make a profound influence in his understanding of rural settings as an anthropologist.
Leeds eventually attended Columbia University in New York City and received a B. A. in Anthropology in 1949. He then went directly into the graduate program at Columbia, where his fellow anthropology colleagues included Marvin Harris and Andrew P. Vayda. Some of his favorite professors and later influences were Alfred L. Kroeber, William Duncan Strong, and Karl Polyani. His dissertation was a study of the politics behind cocoa production in the Bahia region of Brazil. Conducted in 1951-1952, Leeds' investigation was one of four in Bahia supervised by Charles Wagley and Brazilian anthropologist Thales de Azevedo. This study led to his dissertation, "Economic Cycles in Brazil: The Persistence of a Total-Cultural Pattern: Cacao and Other Cases," in which Leeds analyzed the topic from a Marxist viewpoint.
After receiving his Ph.D. in Anthropology from Columbia University in 1957, Leeds embarked on his primary career as a university professor. For the next 32 years, Leeds taught at a variety of institutions--first at Hofstra University and City College in New York City, then the University of Texas, and later at Boston University. In between, Leeds found the time to spend two years (1961-63) as the chief of the Program of Urban Development at the Pan-American Union (PAU) in Washington, D.C. He also spent a year (1972-73) at the Latin American centers in England associated with Oxford University and the University of London.
It was during his university years that Leeds focused on urban studies and urban analysis. Though he did conduct a brief study of the Yaruro peoples of Venezuela in 1958, the majority of his field work thereafter concerned urban development and its effects on society as a whole. Leeds made several field trips to Brazil and other areas of South America while working at the University of Texas; he specifically traveled to Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Bogota, Lima, and Santiago de Chile to study the cultural and political cultures of squatter settlements. From 1965 to 1966, Leeds received funding from the Social Science Research Council and the Ford Foundation to conduct a study of twelve specific favelas (squatter settlements) in Rio de Janeiro. For this fieldwork, Leeds organized Peace Corps volunteers, local community workers, academics (both foreign and Brazilian), and favela residents to help collect and analyze the data. It was during this trip that Leeds met Elizabeth Plotkin, a Peace Corps community action worker, who would later become Leeds' second wife and one of his most important collaborators. Together they wrote a book in Portuguese titled
A Sociologia do Brasil Urbano
(1978), based on their favela research.
In the 1970's Leeds and Plotkin made seven different trips to Portugal to follow different lines of research regarding the area. Leeds specifically researched the labor migration movements from the rural areas to the cities. He later wrote a book on his studies titled
Minha Terra, Portugal: Lamentations and Celebrations (The Growth of an Ethnography and a Commitment)
, though it would go unpublished.
In his later years, Leeds not only took a more active role in various anthropological organizations (specifically those concerning the study of urban development), but he also became an active mentor to many students at Boston University. Leeds supported a variety of graduate student research in anthropology at Boston, as well as student research from other neighboring New England universities. In addition, Leeds began a "Thursday Night Group" that regularly met at his home in Dedham, Massachusetts to discuss a variety of anthropological subjects.
On February 20th, 1989, Leeds died of a heart attack in his Randolph, Vermont farmhouse.
Sources Consulted
Sieber, Timothy R. "The Life of Anthony Leeds: Unity in Diversity." In
Cities, Classes, and Social Order
, by Anthony Leeds, edited Roger Sanjek, 3-26. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1994.
Chronology
1925
Born January 26 in New York, New York
1949
Earns B.A. in Anthropology from Columbia University
1951-52
Conducts disseration field work in the Cacao region of Bahia, Brazil, where he studies the political economy of cocoa production
1956-61
Teaches at Hofstra University and later City College, both in New York City
1957
Completes dissertation, titled "Economic Cycles in Brazil: The Persistence of a Total-Cultural Pattern: Cacao and Other Cases"
1958
Conducts brief field work studying the Yaruro people in Venezuela
1961-63
Head of the Program of Urban Development at the Pan-American Union (PAU) in Washington, D.C.
1963-72
Professor at the University of Texas-Austin
1965-66
Organizes Peace Corps volunteers, Brazilian and foreign academics, and local residents to conduct an intense study of twelve favelas (Brazilian squatter settlements) in Rio de Janeiro
1972-73
Spends a transitional year teaching at the Latin American centers at Oxford University and the University of London
1973-89
Professor at Boston University
1976-80
Takes several field trips to Portugal with his second wife, Elizabeth Plotkin Leeds; there he studies Portuguese labor migrations
1978
Sociologia do Brasil Urbano, co-written with Elizabeth Plotkin Leeds, is published
1989
Leeds dies of a heart attack on February 20 in Randolph, Vermont at the age of 64
Selected Bibliography
1964
Leeds, Anthony. "Brazilian Careers and Social Structure: An Evolutionary Model and Case History."
American Anthropologist
66 (1964): 1321-47.
1965
Leeds, Anthony and Andrew P. Vayda.
Man, Culture, and Animals: The Role of Animals in Human Ecological Adjustment
. Washington, DC: American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1965.
1968
Leeds, Anthony. "The Anthropology of Cities: Some Methodological Issues." In
Urban Anthropology, Research Perspectives and Strategies
, edited by M. Fried, M. Harris, and R. Murphy, 31-47. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press, 1968.
1971
Leeds, Anthony. "The Culture of Poverty Concept- Conceptual, Logical, and Empirical Problems, with Perspectives from Brazil and Peru." In
The Culture of Poverty, A Critique
, edited by E. Leacock, 226-284. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1971.
1976
Leeds, Anthony and Elizabeth Leeds. "Accounting for Behavioral Differences: Three Political Systems and the Responses of Squatters to them in Brazil, Peru, and Chile." In
The City in Comparative Perspective: Cross-National Research and New Directions in Theory
, edited by J. Walton and L. H. Masotti, 193-248. Beverly Hills: Sage, 1976.
1978
Leeds, Anthony and Elizabeth Leeds.
A Sociologia do Brasil Urbano
. Rio de Janeiro: Zahar Editora, 1978.
1979
Leeds, Anthony. "Forms of Urban Integration: "Social Urbanization" in Comparative Perspective."
Urban Anthropology
8, no. 3/4 (1979): 227-27.
1981
Leeds, Anthony. "Low Income Urban Settlement Types, Processes, Structures, Policies." In
The Residential Circumstances of the Urban Poor in Developing Countries
, edited by United Nations Centre for Human Settlements, 21-61. New York: Praeger, 1981.
1984
Leeds, Anthony. "Cities and Countryside in Anthropology." In
Cities of the Mind
, edited by Lloyd Rodwin and Robert M. Hollister, 291-311. New York: Plenum, 1984.

Administration

Author
Jacqueline Saavedra
Processing Information
The papers of Anthony Leeds were received partially organized. The processing archivist kept existing groupings and arrangement and organized the collection into seven series. Original folder titles were retained with titles assigned by the archivist placed within square brackets. Restricted materials have been separated and noted in the container list.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
These papers were donated to the National Anthropological Archives by Columbia University's Department of Anthropology.

Using the Collection

Conditions Governing Use
Contact the respository for terms of use.
Conditions Governing Access
Graded materials of Anthony Leeds' students and grant applications that he reviewed are restricted. His photo album is also restricted due to preservation concerns.
Preferred Citation
Anthony Leeds papers, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution

Related Materials
Anthony Leeds' correspondence and writings can also be found in the Marvin Harris papers at the National Anthropological Archives.

Keywords

Keywords table of terms and types.
Keyword Terms Keyword Types
Urban anthropology Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid
Cacao Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid
Yaruro Indians Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid
Bahia (Brazil : State) Geographic Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid
Anthropology Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid

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