Margaret Read (anthropologist)

Margaret Helen Read, CBE (5 August 1889 – 19 May 1991)[1] was a British social anthropologist and academic, who specialised in colonial education. She was one of the first researchers to apply social anthropology and ethnography principles to the education and health problems of people living in the British colonies.[2]

Margaret Helen Read
Born5 August 1889
Died19 May 1991(1991-05-19) (aged 101)
NationalityBritish
Alma materNewnham College, Cambridge
London School of Economics
Occupation(s)Social anthropologist and academic
AwardsCommander of the Order of the British Empire

Life and work

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Read was born on 5 August 1889 in Battersea Rise, London, England, to Mabyn Read, a medical doctor, and Isabel Lawford.[3][4] She was educated at Roedean School, an all-girls private school near Brighton.[3] She studied history at Newnham College, Cambridge from 1908 to 1911, although women were not permitted to graduate with degrees from the University of Cambridge at that time.[4] She then undertook a one-year diploma in geography at Newnham.[4] Read never married, but had been engaged to a man who went on to be killed during the First World War.[4]

Between 1919 and 1924, she undertook her first social work missions to Indian hill villages.[2] On a break from her job at the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA) in Kolkata, India, she joined two other young women to travel from Kalimpong in West Bengal, to Sikkim in northeast India. For making this trip, she was named a "Modern Girl" by author Margaret Allen.[5]

Until 1930, she also took on lecturing opportunities in Britain and the United States on subjects related to international affairs. In the 1930s, Read attended the London School of Economics (LSE), to study anthropology which included ethnographic field research in Africa, including Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) and Nyasaland (now Malawi).[2] In 1934, Read was awarded her Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree at LSE for a thesis titled "Primitive economics with special reference to culture contact".[6]

From 1937 to 1940, Read was an assistant lecturer at LSE.[2] From 1940 to 1945, she served as temporary head of the Colonial Department of the Institute of Education, University of London, having been selected by Sir Fred Clarke.[4] Following the end of the Second World War in 1945, she continued in the role on a permanent basis and was made a reader.[3][4] She co-wrote one of her early reports of the newly appointed Freda Gwilliam about the education of women and girls education in Nyasaland.[7]

In 1949, she was awarded a chair as Professor of Education "with special reference to colonial areas".[4]

She was associated with the Colonial Office of the British Government: she acted as an advisor on education policy in the colonies, and she was the British delegate to the UNESCO General Conferences of 1946 and 1947.[4] Read was influential in shaping the British Government's attitude to post-war colonial education. After retiring in 1955, she became a consultant, notably for the World Health Organisation (WHO), and she also became a visiting professor in Nigeria and the United States.[2]

She died on 19 May 1991.[1]

Selected works

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  • Read, Margaret (1931). The Indian peasant uprooted: a study of the human machine. London: Longmans, Green & Co.
  • Read, Margaret (1953). Africans and Their Schools. London: Longmans, Green & Co.

Archives

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References

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  1. ^ a b "ID REF Read". id REF. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Papers of Margaret Read - Archives Hub". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  3. ^ a b c "READ, Prof. Margaret (Helen)". Who Was Who. Oxford University Press. April 2014. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Whitehead, Clive (January 2008). "Read, Margaret Helen (1889–1991)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/72739. Retrieved 30 January 2017. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ Allen, Margaret (December 2010). ""That's the Modern Girl": Missionary Women and Modernity in Kolkata, c. 1907 - c. 1940". Itinerario. 34 (3): 83–96. doi:10.1017/S0165115310000707. ISSN 0165-1153.
  6. ^ Read, Margaret (1934). Primitive economics with special reference to culture contact (phd thesis). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  7. ^ Freda H Gwilliam and Margaret Read, Report on the Education of Women and Girls in... 31 January 1949.