Robert B. Textor oral history interview
- Date
1986-05-17
- Main contributors
Textor, Robert B.; Mayo, Marlene J.
- Summary
-
Oral history interview with Robert B. Textor conducted by Marlene Mayo on May 17, 1986. Robert B. Textor (March 13, 1923 – January 3, 2013) was an anthropologist, professor, and scholar born in Cloquet, Minnesota. He attended college for political science before joining the Army in 1943, where he was placed into the Army Specialized Training Program to study Japanese to become an interpreter. He was then sent to the Military Intelligence Japanese Language School before getting a job as a civilian to go to Japan as an interpreter for Allied Translator and Interpreter Service in 1946. Following his work there, Textor took a job with the Civil Information and Education Division under SCAP, remaining there until November 1947. In 1945, he had also received his bachelor’s in Asian Studies from the University of Michigan. He returned to the United States in 1948, receiving his PhD in cultural anthropology from Cornell University in 1960. From 1961-2, Textor trained the first group pf Peace Corps Volunteers for Thailand. In 1964, he joined the Stanford University faculty as a professor of anthropology. He is recognized for his research on Thai and Asian culture and for creating the ethnographic futures research and originating anticipatory anthropology. In 1998, Textor established the American Anthropological Association established the Textor Family Prize for Excellence in Anticipatory Anthropology. Textor retired to Portland, Oregon in 1990. In 1997, he developed a group called the “Thirsters”, a community of people discussing world issues, peace, and cultural differences. In 2013, Robert B. Textor passed away. He was 89 years old.
- Publisher
University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
- Genre
Oral histories
- Subject
Japan--History--Allied occupation, 1945-1952
- Locations
Japan; California; Stanford University
- Collection
Postwar Japan
- Unit
Special Collections and University Archives
- Language
English
- Rights Statement
- In Copyright
- Terms of Use
Collection may be protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. To obtain permission to publish or reproduce, please contact the University of Maryland Libraries at http://www.lib.umd.edu/special/contact/home.
- Physical Description
Recording: 03:28:00 (audiocassette; mp3); Transcript: 71 pages (PDF)
- Notes
This oral history interview is part of the Marlene J. Mayo oral histories. A guide to the full collection of Marlene J. Mayo oral histories is available in our archival collections: http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/42478.
Accession 2009-209-GWP
An interview transcript is available.
- Other Identifier
Filename: prange-087590
Access Restrictions
This item is accessible by: the public.