Early life and education Gustave Claude Lévi-Strauss was born in 1908 to
French-Jewish (turned agnostic) parents who were living in
Brussels, where his father was working as a portrait painter at the time. He grew up in Paris, living on a street of the upscale
16th arrondissement named after the artist
Claude Lorrain, whose work he admired and later wrote about. During the
First World War, from age 6 to 10, he lived with his maternal grandfather, who was the Rabbi of Versailles. Despite his religious environment early on, Claude Lévi-Strauss was an atheist or agnostic, at least in his adult life. From 1918 to 1925 he studied at
Lycée Janson de Sailly high school, receiving a baccalaureate in June 1925 (age of 16).
Early career In 1935, after a few years of secondary school teaching, he took up a last-minute offer to be part of a French cultural mission to Brazil in which he would serve as a visiting professor of sociology at the
University of São Paulo while his then-wife,
Dina, served as a visiting professor of ethnology. The couple lived and did their anthropological work in Brazil from 1935 to 1939. During this time, while he was a visiting professor of sociology, Claude undertook his only
ethnographic fieldwork. He accompanied Dina, a trained ethnographer in her own right, who was also a visiting professor at the University of São Paulo, where they conducted research forays into the
Mato Grosso and the
Amazon rainforest. They first studied the
Guaycuru and
Bororó Indian tribes, staying among them for a few days. In 1938, they returned for a second, more than half-year-long expedition to study the
Nambikwara and
Tupi-Kawahib societies. At this time, his wife had an eye infection that prevented her from completing the study, which he concluded. This experience cemented Lévi-Strauss's professional identity as an
anthropologist.
Edmund Leach suggests, from Lévi-Strauss's own accounts in
Tristes Tropiques, that he could not have spent more than a few weeks in any one place and was never able to converse easily with any of his native informants in their native language, which is uncharacteristic of anthropological research methods of participatory interaction with subjects to gain a full understanding of a culture. In the 1980s, he discussed why he became
vegetarian in pieces published in Italian daily newspaper
La Repubblica and other publications anthologized in the posthumous book
Nous sommes tous des cannibales (2013):
Expatriation Lévi-Strauss returned to France in 1939 to take part in the war effort and was assigned as a liaison agent to the
Maginot Line. After the French capitulation in 1940, he was employed at a
lycée in
Montpellier, but then was dismissed under the
Vichy racial laws (Lévi-Strauss's family, originally from Alsace, was of Jewish ancestry). Around that time, he and his first wife separated. She stayed behind and worked in the
French resistance, while he managed to escape Vichy France by boat to
Martinique, from where he was finally able to continue travelling. (
Victor Serge describes conversations with Lévi-Strauss aboard the freighter Capitaine Paul-Lemerle from Marseilles to Martinique in his Notebooks.) In 1941, he was offered a position at the
New School for Social Research in New York City and granted admission to the United States. A series of voyages brought him, via South America, to
Puerto Rico, where he was investigated by the
FBI after German letters in his luggage aroused the suspicions of customs agents. Lévi-Strauss spent most of the war in New York City. Along with
Jacques Maritain,
Henri Focillon, and
Roman Jakobson, he was a founding member of the
École Libre des Hautes Études, a sort of university-in-exile for French academics. The war years in New York were formative for Lévi-Strauss in several ways. His relationship with Jakobson helped shape his theoretical outlook (Jakobson and Lévi-Strauss are considered to be two of the central figures on which
structuralist thought is based). In addition, Lévi-Strauss was also exposed to the American anthropology espoused by
Franz Boas, who taught at
Columbia University. In 1942, while having dinner at the Faculty House at Columbia, Boas died in Lévi-Strauss's arms. This intimate association with Boas gave his early work a distinctive American inclination that helped facilitate its acceptance in the U.S. After a brief stint from 1946 to 1947 as a
cultural attaché to the French embassy in
Washington, DC, Lévi-Strauss returned to Paris in 1948. At this time, he received his
state doctorate from the
Sorbonne by submitting, in the French tradition, both a "major" and a "minor"
doctoral thesis. These were (
The Family and Social Life of the Nambikwara Indians) and (
The Elementary Structures of Kinship).
Later life and death In 2008, he became the first member of the Académie française to reach the age of 100 and one of the few living authors to have his works published in the
Bibliothèque de la Pléiade. On the death of
Maurice Druon on 14 April 2009, he became the dean of the
Académie, its longest-serving member. He died on 30 October 2009, at age 100.
Bernard Kouchner, the
French Foreign Minister, said Lévi-Strauss "broke with an ethnocentric vision of history and humanity ... At a time when we are trying to give meaning to globalization, to build a fairer and more humane world, I would like Claude Lévi-Strauss's universal echo to resonate more strongly". In a similar vein, a statement by Lévi-Strauss was broadcast on
National Public Radio in the remembrance produced by
All Things Considered on 3 November 2009: "There is today a frightful disappearance of living species, be they plants or animals. And it's clear that the density of human beings has become so great, if I can say so, that they have begun to poison themselves. And the world which I am finishing my existence is no longer a world that I like."
The Daily Telegraph said in its obituary that Lévi-Strauss was "one of the dominating postwar influences in French intellectual life and the leading exponent of Structuralism in the social sciences". Permanent secretary of the Académie française
Hélène Carrère d'Encausse said: "He was a thinker, a philosopher.... We will not find another like him". == Career and development of structural anthropology ==