A newer version of this project is available. See below for other available versions.
Franz Boas’s Immigrant Study
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Clarence Gravlee, University of Florida
Version: View help for Version V1
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
---|---|---|---|
boas_family.sav | application/x-spss-sav | 1.6 MB | 09/27/2019 12:03:PM |
boas_family.txt | text/plain | 1.2 MB | 09/27/2019 02:39:PM |
boas_master.sav | application/x-spss-sav | 1.5 MB | 09/27/2019 12:04:PM |
boas_master.txt | text/plain | 969.1 KB | 09/27/2019 12:04:PM |
cdbk_boasfamily.pdf | application/pdf | 140.7 KB | 09/27/2019 12:04:PM |
cdbk_boasmaster.pdf | application/pdf | 105 KB | 09/27/2019 12:03:PM |
Project Citation:
Gravlee, Clarence. Franz Boas's Immigrant Study. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2019-09-28. https://doi.org/10.3886/E112086V1
Project Description
Summary:
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In 1910, Franz Boas published the first results from his classic study, Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of Immigrants. This landmark work became controversial almost immediately, as it challenged many prevailing ideas about human biology and race. The most striking finding at the time was that head shape—long thought to be a fixed, purely hereditary marker of race—was in fact sensitive to changes in environment within a single generation.
Boas’s most impressive response to the controversy was his decision in 1928 to publish 504 pages of raw, handwritten data from the immigrant study as Materials for the Study of Inheritance in Man (New York: Columbia University Press). He explained: "It seemed necessary to make the data accessible, because a great many questions relating to heredity and environmental influences may be treated by means of this material." In the same spirit, here we provide the machine-readable data set that is the basis of our published reanalysis of Boas’s data set.
The data are provided in two structures:
Boas’s most impressive response to the controversy was his decision in 1928 to publish 504 pages of raw, handwritten data from the immigrant study as Materials for the Study of Inheritance in Man (New York: Columbia University Press). He explained: "It seemed necessary to make the data accessible, because a great many questions relating to heredity and environmental influences may be treated by means of this material." In the same spirit, here we provide the machine-readable data set that is the basis of our published reanalysis of Boas’s data set.
The data are provided in two structures:
- Files labeled "master" are formatted to match Boas’s original. Each individual is assigned to a unique case.
- Files labeled "family" facilitate parent-offspring comparisons. Second-generation immigrants are assigned to cases, with data for each descendant’s mother and father assigned as variables.
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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human biology;
stature;
cephalic index;
race;
immigration;
plasticity;
biological anthropology
Geographic Coverage:
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New York, NY
Collection Date(s):
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1908 – 1910
Universe:
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Immigrants and their offspring in New York City from seven groups: Bohemian, Central Italian, Hebrew, Hungarian and Slovak, Polish, Scotch, and Sicilian.
Data Type(s):
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other
Collection Notes:
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See Boas's original publications on the immigrant study for technical details about the collection of anthropometric data. See Gravlee et al. (2003) for details about data entry and data quality in the machine-readable files.
Methodology
Data Source:
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Boas, Franz. 1928. Materials for the Study of Inheritance in Man. Vol. VI, Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology. New York: Columbia University Press.
Related Publications
Published Versions
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This material is distributed exactly as it arrived from the data depositor. ICPSR has not checked or processed this material. Users should consult the investigator(s) if further information is desired.