OFFER: Buy 2 Get 1 Free on All Clothes, Code B2G1 Ends 22/11 11:59pm SGT

*Apply code B2G1 at checkout to enjoy discount.*The discount is only applicable to clothes. Code expires at 22/11/24 11:59pm SGT. Offer can only be combined with Thryft Club discounts and cannot be combined with any other offers or discounts. Offer is subject to change without notice. Other restrictions may apply.

Get 10% off all year round! Join Thryft Club
Get 10% off all year round and $10 off your next order! Join Thryft Club
Buy 3 Get Another Free On All Under S$10
Sale

Blackberry Winter - My Earlier Years

Regular price RM21.92 MYR Now RM14.49 MYR Save 34%
Unit price
per

Authentic anthropological introspection on writer's formative years.

Recommended for fans of anthropology & autobiographies. Mead's vivid writing takes readers on a journey through her early life, shaping her unique worldview and career as a cultural anthropologist.

  • National Book Award Finalist for Biography (1973)
Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.
Sale

Blackberry Winter - My Earlier Years

Regular price RM21.92 MYR Now RM14.49 MYR Save 34%
Unit price
per
ISBN: 9780671826369
Authors: Margaret Mead
Publisher: Pocket
Date of Publication: 1978-10-03
Format: Paperback
Goodreads rating: 3.92
(rated by 430 readers)

Description

During her life Margaret Mead represented many things to the American public; sage, scientist, noncomformist, crusader for world peace & archetypal grandmother. An enduring cultural icon, she came to symbolize a new kind of woman, one who successfully combined marriage & motherhood with a career & scholarship with a singular concern for its role in the lives of ordinary people. Even today, when memoirs of successful women scientists & scholars remain scarce, Blackberry Winter , 1st published in '72, provides a rare glimpse of a pioneering woman's formative journey. In her chapters "On Being a Granddaughter" & "The Pattern My Family Made Me," Mead examines the wisdom she gained from her maternal grandmother as well as the inheritance she recieved from her ancestors, & how her upbringing fueled her desire for a fulfilling career that would reflect her own emerging values. We are treated to captivating portraits of bohemian life in NYC in the '20s; her early days at the American Museum of Natural History, where she met her longtime mentor, Franz Boas, & friend, Ruth Benedict; & 1st field trip to study adolescent girls in Samoa. Near the book's end, in "On Being a Grandmother," she reflects on the legacy she leaves her descendants, indeed, all of humanity. This autobiography, reissued for a new generation of readers, will appeal to any eager to discover a woman of our century who made her way in a world seldom hospitable to the dreams & accomplishments of women.
Condition guide
 

Similar Reads

Authentic anthropological introspection on writer's formative years.

Recommended for fans of anthropology & autobiographies. Mead's vivid writing takes readers on a journey through her early life, shaping her unique worldview and career as a cultural anthropologist.

  • National Book Award Finalist for Biography (1973)
Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.