词条 | Ruth Sawtell Wallis |
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| name = Ruth Otis Sawtell Wallis | birth_date = {{birth date|1895|3|15}} | birth_place = Springfield, Massachusetts | death_date = {{death date and age|1978|1|21|1895|3|15}} | death_place = South Woodstock, Connecticut | fields = Physical anthropology | thesis_title = Ossification and Growth of Children from One to Eight Years of Age | thesis_url = http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/article-abstract/1174955 | thesis_year = 1929 | doctoral_advisor = Franz U. Boas | website = | footnotes = }} Ruth Sawtell Wallis (15 March 1895 – 21 January 1978) was an American academic and physical anthropologist. Wallis was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, to Joseph Otis Sawtell and Grace Quimby.[1] She graduated from Radcliffe College in 1919 with a bachelor's degree in English. She then attended the school's graduate program in anthropology, traveling to Europe on a science fellowship to do research. She was the first to discover Azilian remains in France, uncovering two at Montardit, Ariège.[2] Upon her return to the United States, Wallis switched to the anthropology program at Columbia University under Franz Boas. She assisted in one of Boas's most famous studies, an examination of head circumference and changes in head shape among immigrants.[1] She then began studying growth and anthropometrics of young children; her doctoral thesis on that topic "remains a standard study widely quoted today".[1] She was hired by the anthropology department at the University of Iowa in 1930. She married Wilson Dallam Wallis, a professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota, in 1931, and took an assistant professorship in sociology at Hamline University.[1] Ruth was later dismissed because "it was unthinkable to have two employed academics in one family during the Depression".[3] On behalf of the Bureau of Home Economics, she undertook the largest ever study of children's growth, which resulted in the standardization of sizing for children's clothes.[2][3] During the Second World War, Wallis examined labor statistics for the War Manpower Commission and helped coordinate the Japanese Language and Culture Program for the Army. She also began writing mystery novels.[1] She helped create an ethnography of the Micmac in Nova Scotia in the 1950s,[2] and studied other native peoples in both Canada and the United States. After moving to Connecticut with her family, Ruth became a sociology lecturer at Annhurst College in 1956; she eventually became a full professor before retiring in 1974.[1] Works
References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite journal|title=Ruth Sawtell Wallis|author=Collins, June M|journal=American Anthropologist|pages=85–87|volume=81|issue=1|doi=10.1525/aa.1979.81.1.02a00080}} {{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Wallis, Ruth Sawtell}}2. ^1 2 {{cite web|url=http://anthropology.usf.edu/women/wallis/wallis.htm|publisher=University of South Florida|title=Ruth Sawtell Wallis|accessdate=15 June 2012|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130503054751/http://anthropology.usf.edu/women/wallis/wallis.htm|archivedate=3 May 2013|df=}} 3. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://www.indiana.edu/~wanthro/theory_pages/Colson.htm|accessdate=15 June 2012|date=May 1998|title=Biographies: Elizabeth Florence Colson|author=Cash, Jennifer|publisher=Indiana University}} 12 : 1895 births|1978 deaths|20th-century American novelists|American anthropologists|American mystery writers|American women novelists|Writers from Springfield, Massachusetts|Women mystery writers|20th-century American women writers|Radcliffe College alumni|Columbia University alumni|Novelists from Massachusetts |
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