De Angulo began his career in field linguistics and anthropology at the
University of California, Berkeley in the early 1920s, shortly after his marriage to
L. S. ("Nancy") Freeland. (He had already acquired an M.D. from Johns Hopkins and done research in biology at Stanford.) During the next decade he and his wife lived for intermittent periods among several native Californian tribes to study their cultures, languages and music. As a linguist, he contributed to the knowledge of more than a dozen native Northern Californian and
Mexican Indian languages and music-systems and collected additional field data about their cultures and oral traditions. De Angulo was particularly interested in the semantics of grammatical systems of the tribes he studied, and was a pioneer in the study of North American
ethnomusicology, particularly in his recordings of native music. He was especially concerned to develop an existential understanding of Native American cosmology, social psychology, values and culture. From the perspective of the academic scholarship of the period, this amounted to "going native." His key exposition of this matter is “Indians In Overalls”, first published in 1950 in
The Hudson Review and subsequently as a book. De Angulo corresponded with
Franz Boas,
Alfred L. Kroeber, and
Edward Sapir. Much of his fieldwork was funded by the
American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Research in Native American Languages, under the direction chiefly of Boas, and in part by Kroeber, head of Berkeley's Department of Anthropology, which published and has archived some of his field notes. As a phonetician, he was largely self-taught. He had no formal training in the field, but acquired some basics of the discipline and discourse from trained linguists he worked with, including Nancy Freeland; by his own account, his correspondence seeking instruction "exhausted Sapir's patience". In one case, the accuracy of his record has been questioned, and some linguistic work attributed to him was done by his wife. Boas, Kroeber, and finally Sapir also had qualms about his reliability, and Boas suspected that some of his analysis of Achumawi was imaginary and not based on actual observation, but these leaders in the still-emergent field of
Americanist linguistics had an urgent need to get workers of any competence into the field while indigenous languages were still spoken. De Angulo's
Bohemian lifestyle ran afoul of college manners and social hypocrisies and contributed to his not pursuing a normal academic career. His involvement in Native American research effectively came to an end following the death of his son Alvar in an automobile accident in 1933, near
Big Sur. He retired to an isolated hilltop ranch where he had lived intermittently for many years, and which he had first homesteaded after the 1915 failure of his ranch in
Alturas. At this point, his writings took a turn into fiction and poetry, much of which he described as an alternative technique for presenting the ethnographic material he had collected in an accessible format. This was especially true for his bestseller,
Indian Tales. Much of his fictional work attempted to recognize and embrace the native "
coyote tales", or the
trickster wisdom inherent in native storytelling.
Ezra Pound called him "the American
Ovid" and
William Carlos Williams "one of the most outstanding writers I have ever encountered." De Angulo also went on to tutor numerous famous authors, including
Jack Spicer in linguistics, and
Robert Duncan in North American
shamanic
sorcery; he appears as a character in
Jack Kerouac's books. Perceptions of de Angulo swing wildly; he is seen variously as a gifted but inconsistent field ethnographer, an ‘‘Old Coyote,’’ and an anarchist hero and talented subversive. Some (including Pound and Williams) regarded him as an accomplished poet. De Angulo shaped and diversified the scholarly picture of the native Californian landscape. His re-envisioning of the ontological status of Native American cosmology and ethnology anticipated the Deep Ecology and Back To The Pleistocene thought of the 1990s. He was friend and colleague to poets, composers, and scholars such as
Harry Partch,
Henry Miller,
Robinson Jeffers,
Mary Austin,
Henry Cowell,
Carl Jung,
D. H. Lawrence,
Kenneth Rexroth, Robert Duncan, and many others and an important participant in the San Francisco Bay Area's literary and cultural avant garde from his arrival until his death. == Works ==