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10 Facts About Naomi Quinn

1.

Naomi Robin Quinn was a major figure in cognitive anthropology, with contributions to research methods and cultural models, particularly applied to topics such as American models of marriage and relationships and to child-rearing cross-culturally.

2.

Naomi Quinn earned her AB in anthropology from Radcliffe College in 1961, with Bea Whiting as her mentor.

3.

Naomi Quinn worked as a research assistant coding the aggression data from the Six Cultures project.

4.

Naomi Quinn participated in a summer fieldwork project in Ecuador with Marvin Harris.

5.

Naomi Quinn entered graduate school in anthropology at Stanford in 1963, where she studied under advisor Roy D'Andrade.

6.

Naomi Quinn earned her PhD in 1971, based on fieldwork among the Fante people in Ghana.

7.

Naomi Quinn's focus during her dissertation research in Ghana shifted away from studying folk taxonomies toward an interest in how people acquired and processed information in natural contexts.

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8.

In 1972, Naomi Quinn joined the Department of Anthropology at Duke University, where she would remain for the rest of her career.

9.

Naomi Quinn was promoted to associate professor in 1978 and full professor in 1999, serving as chair of Duke's Anthropology Department from 1989 to 1996.

10.

Naomi Quinn was a major figure of feminist scholarship as well as pathbreaking achievements within psychological anthropology and in cultural anthropology more broadly, publishing numerous important studies relevant to childhood socialization and "the gendered character of cognition", as well as studies and statements critical of anthropological institutions' treatment of women anthropologists.