Horace Mitchell Miner


Horace Mitchell Miner was an anthropologist, particularly interested in those languages of his time that were still closely tied to the earth and agricultural practices. During World War II, he served as a counterintelligence agent in Italy and Japan. In 1955, he earned his doctorate at the University of Chicago, going on to teach there, as well as at other universities in the United States, and on a Fulbright Fellowship at a college in Uganda. He later worked elsewhere in Africa, and in South America. He published several books, including Culture and Agriculture, and City in Modern Africa. However, he is equally famous for a satirical essay entitled, which not only satirizes American culture from an anthropological perspective and, as the Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology states, "...offered incipient cultural critiques of Euro-American arrogance, by showing that magic is not the prerogative of non-Western societies," but also provides "a classic and apt example of how ethnocentrism can color one's thinking." The work was also featured in American Anthropologist.

Awards

Decorated Legion of Merit, Bronze Star
Recipient Social Science Research Council Demobilization award, 1945
Society Science Research Council Fellow, 1936–37
Ford Foundation grantee, 1956; Rockefeller Foundation grantee, Nigeria, 1957–58
Fulbright research award
Horace Rackham grant for field research Algeria, 1950
National Science Foundation grant for research Nigeria, 1970-71

Education

AB- University Kentucky,
A.M.- University Chicago,
PhD- University Chicago,
Postgrad-, Colombia,