Metraux, Rhoda (1914–2003)

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Metraux, Rhoda (1914–2003)

American cultural anthropologist. Name variations: Rhoda Bubendey Metraux or Métraux. Born Rhoda Bubendey, Oct 18, 1914, in Brooklyn, NY; died Nov 26, 2003, in Craftsbury, VT; dau. of Frederick Bubendey (banker) and Anna Marie (Kappelmann) Bubendey; attended Packer Collegiate Institute; graduate of Vassar College, 1934; attended Yale University; m. Arthur B. Proctor III (army officer), c. 1934 (died c. 1936); m. Alfred Metraux (anthropologist), Mar 1941; children: (2nd m.) Daniel.

Became research assistant to Margaret Mead; performed fieldwork in village of Tambunam in East Sepik Province of Papua New Guinea (3 trips between 1967 and 1972); with Mead, published The Study of Culture at a Distance (1953); with 2nd husband and Mead, lived in cooperative household; known particularly for work on culture at a distance.

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