Columbia had been the home of
Franz Boas and
Ruth Benedict for many years and was the center of the spread of anthropology in America. By the time Wolf arrived at Columbia in the fall of 1946, the anthropology department had been mired in a 40-year conflict with Columbia University’s President Nicholas Murray Butler, an arch-conservative. Butler battled against Boas’ progressive vision of the academic as a ‘‘citizen-scientist,’’ what he felt was ‘‘a moral obligation to spread scientific knowledge as widely as possible.’’ Butler epitomized the very racism, militarism, and Eugenics that Boas vociferously opposed. Indeed, the department was in shambles, a condition that Wolf described as the worst educational experience he had known of. Part of the problem was that the chaos of a poorly staffed department could not keep up with the swelling number of veterans who entered with ample federal funds, yet were insufficiently prepared for the rigors of graduate training. Rather than being demoralized, Wolf and his classmates — Sidney Mintz, Stanley Diamond, Elman Service, John Murra, Robert Manners, and Morton Fried — formed an independent study group to prepare for qualifying examinations. They became bound through commonalities of seeing anthropology in connection with a socialist outlook. Representing this leftist political view, they jokingly called themselves the Mundial Upheaval Society. By this time, Boas' anthropological style, which was suspicious of generalization and preferred detailed studies of particular subjects, was also out of fashion. The new chair of the anthropology department was
Julian Steward, a student of
Robert Lowie and
Alfred Kroeber. Steward was interested in creating a scientific anthropology that explained how societies evolved and adapted to their physical environment. Wolf was one of the coterie of students who developed around Steward. Older students' leftist beliefs,
Marxist in orientation, worked well with Steward's less politicized evolutionism. Many anthropologists prominent in the 1980s such as
Sidney Mintz,
Morton Fried,
Elman Service,
Stanley Diamond, and
Robert F. Murphy were among this group. Wolf's dissertation research was carried out as part of Steward's 'People of
Puerto Rico' project. Soon after, in 1961, Wolf began teaching at the
University of Michigan, holding a position as a Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Department of Anthropology at
Lehman College,
CUNY before moving in 1971 to the
CUNY Graduate Center, where he spent the remainder of his career. In addition to his Latin American work, Wolf also did
fieldwork in Europe. With his student, John W. Cole, he conducted fieldwork on the culture, history, and settlement pattern of the
Tyrol region, which was later published in their book
The Hidden Frontier. Wolf's key contributions to anthropology are related to his focus on issues of power, politics, and colonialism during the 1970s and 1980s when these topics were moving to the center of disciplinary concerns. His most well-known book,
Europe and the People Without History, is famous for critiquing popular European history for largely ignoring historical actors outside the ruling classes. He also demonstrates that non-Europeans were active participants in global processes like the
fur and
slave trades and so were not 'frozen in time' or 'isolated' but had always been deeply implicated in world history. In his Distinguished Lecture for the 1989 American Anthropological Association annual meeting, he warned that anthropologists are involved in 'continuously slaying paradigms, only to see them return to life, as if discovered for the first time.' This results in anthropology 'resembling a project in intellectual deforestation.' He argued that anthropology can be cumulative rather than continuous re-invention. Anthropologists, rather than focusing on high-flown theory, should aim for explanatory anthropology focused on the realities of life and fieldwork. Wolf struggled with colon cancer later in life. He died in 1999 in
Irvington, New York. == Work and ideas ==