Peter Farb


Peter Farb was an American author, anthropologist, linguist, environmentalist, biologist, and spokesman for conservation.

Biography

Farb was born July 25, 1929, in New York, NY to Solomon and Cecelia Farb. In 1950, he graduated magna cum laude from Vanderbilt University. He attended Columbia University graduate school from 1950 to 1951. He married museum director and painter Oriole Horch in 1953 and together had two sons, Mark Daniel and Thomas Forest.
Peter Farb was a freelance writer in the areas of the natural and human sciences for many years, authoring many acclaimed books, including several books for young readers, and columns in national magazines such as Better Homes and Gardens, and Reader’s Digest. President John F. Kennedy's Secretary of the Interior, Stuart L. Udall described him as a "... young man with a consuming interest in the land and living things... one of the finest conservation spokesmen of our period."
He possessed a significant knowledge of North America and was critical of American expansionism in his 1968 anthropological study and book, Man's Rise to Civilization... In it, he writes that the "White Man" owes a debt from his acculturation or "indianization," comparable in some ways to the Roman acculturation in conquering the Greeks.
He was a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Anthropological Association, the Society for American Archeology, and the Anthropological Society of Washington, D.C.
Farb died from leukemia, April 8, 1980, Boston MA. At the time of death, he had been working with Irven DeVore on a new book, The Human Experience: A Textbook of Anthropology.
He came up with a paradox: "Intensification of production to feed an increased population leads to a still greater increase in population."

Dates of interest

1950–1952: Argosy Magazine feature editor
1960–1961: editor-in-chief of the publishing agent Panorama until the project sponsored by the Columbia Broadcasting System ended.
1964–1971: Curator for American Indian Cultures, Riverside Museum, New York, N.Y.
1971: National Book Awards Committee Judge
1971–1972: visiting lecturer, Yale University
1971–1978: Fellow of Calhoun College, Yale University
1976: University of Massachusetts Amherst Libraries Trustee
1966–1971: Consultant to the Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C.

Books

  1. 1959: Living Earth
  2. 1959: The Insect World
  3. 1959: The Story of Butterflies and Other Insects
  4. 1961: The Story of Dams
  5. 1962: The Story of Life: Plants and Animals Through the Ages
  6. 1962, 1977 : The Insects
  7. 1963, 1979 : Ecology
  8. 1964: The Face of North America
  9. 1964, 1978 : The Land and Wildlife of North America
  10. 1964: Face of America: The Natural History of a Continent
  11. 1966: The Atlantic Shore: Human and Natural History from Long Island to Labrador by Peter Farb and John Hay
  12. 1967: The Land, Wildlife, and Peoples of the Bible
  13. 1968: Man’s Rise to Civilization As Shown by the Indians of North America from Primeval Times to the Coming of the Industrial State
  14. 1970: Yankee Doodle
  15. 1973: Word Play: What Happens when People Talk .
  16. 1978 : Man’s Rise to Civilization: The Cultural Ascent of the Indians of North America
  17. 1978: The Forest
  18. 1978: Humankind
  19. 1980: Consuming Passions - The Anthropology of Eating by Peter Farb & George J. Armelagos