Delmos Jones

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Delmos J. Jones
Born
Browns, Alabama , U.S.
DiedFebruary 3, 1999 Aged 63
Durham,New York U.S.
EducationSan Francisco State College (BA), University of Arizona (MA), Cornell University (PhD)
OccupationAnthropologist
SpouseMary Lou

Delmos J. Jones (1936-1999) was an African American anthropologist who devoted his intellectual career to working for social justice for all peoples.[1] Delmos Jones identified with the political marginality and socioeconomic struggles of his subjects and sought ways to direct anthropological research toward the dismantling of oppression and inequality.

Jones is most remembered for his work on the ethics of basic research and his theoretical arguments concerning native anthropology. Jones was dissatisfied with the way theoretical paradigms, praxis, and outcomes in anthropological research were supportive of, or neutral to, oppressive ends.[2] In the place of these practices and outcomes, he envisioned a praxis strongly committed to the goals of justice and equality for oppressed populations. His research interests ranged from the Lahu, a hill tribe in Northern Thailand, to the Australian Aborigines, to community organizing among poor people in the United States, but he focused throughout on problems of inequality and the rights of oppressed groups. Jones dies of cancer on February 3, 1999, at his home in East Durham, NY.[3]

Early life and education[edit]

Delmos, born in 1936 to sharecroppers on a farm near the small town of Browns, Alabama, twenty miles to the west of Selma, Alabama. Delmos Jones was the fourth of five children, working all picking cotton and working on the farm. The family lived a modest, rural life and would relocate as needed to find work. Delmos's father worked off-season to "fill the gaps". The family moved around the South and traveled even as far as California.[1] As a poor black boy in the Jim Crow South, Jones's access to learning opportunities and materials was really limited. In order to pursue his education beyond the segregated Dallas County Training School in Beloit, Alabama, at age of fifteen Jones traveled by bus to join his older sister in Oakland, CA.

Segregation 1938

Liberating himself from his childhood agricultural labor. His expenses in the South laid an important foundation for who he was to become and how he would interpret the conditions and struggles of distant peoples and cultures that he would eventually encounter. Jones arrived in California at the age of just fifteen.[3] Oakland, a booming blue-collar town, allowed him to experience life outside of the South's strict codes of racial segregation. In the midst of new experiences, like sitting on the front seats of a bus, Jones encountered diverse individuals with even more diverse sets of ideas. His sister, a secretary for the local communist party, likely facilitated these entrées. This first experience of living an urban setting, surrounded by those working a mix of blue and white-collar jobs, likely impacted Jones's notion of the range of possibilities for how own life.[2]

Jones, earned his B.A. in anthropology at San Francisco State College in 1959, and M.A. degree from the University of Arizona in 1962 and PhD from Cornell University in 1967.

Early career[edit]

After graduating from Oakland Technical High School in 1954, the first possibility that Jones chose to pursue was college. He enrolled in what is now San Francisco State University, and although his initial intent was to become a writer, there his intellectual curiosities led him to the field of anthropology. During his time at San Francisco State, Jones was greatly influenced by the founder of the university's Anthropology Department, Adán Treganza.Treganza was an adventurous outdoors man who, in spite of a shoestring budget, took students into the field for archaeological training .Under his tutelage, Jones gained his first hands-on experiences in anthropology. Duly inspired, Jones earned a BA in anthropology from San Francisco State University in 1959 and went on to pursue graduate studies in the discipline. Becoming an Anthropologist During the time that Delmos Jones was working to become an anthropologist, the discipline, like academia and society in general, was undergoing significant changes. Within academia, the era of McCarthyism was coming to an end, precipitating an era of antiestablishment.[3]

Jones left college instilled with ideas concerning social inequality and a desire to work for social justice from within the disciplinary perspective of anthropology. However, practical life considerations compelled him to first move in a different direction. When the US Army sought to draft Jones they learned of some of his earlier political activities and the military rejected him for service, designating him as a security risk.[4] He had only been marginally involved in these groups, which included the Junior Youth League, the San Francisco Writers Workshop, and the Youth Recorder, and had not participated in any subversive activities. However, the hysteria surrounding McCarthyism meant that the armed forces would not tolerate anyone in its ranks having even the slightest connections to left-leaning ideas or individuals.[2]

Later career[edit]

Jones's second option was to move his family and enroll in the University of Arizona, where he had been accepted into the master's program in anthropology. There, his anthropological curiosities were nurtured under the tutelage and mentorship of Robert Allan Hackenberg. Jones arrived in Arizona to find Hackenberg engaged in work, under the auspices of the University of Arizona's Bureau of Ethic Research, focusing on a Southwest Native American tribe, then known as the Papago. Through his work with Hackenberg, Jones was able to acquire substantial skills and experience in the large-scale collection of ethnographic data. Jones compiled thorough descriptions of existing Papago settlements. While still a masters' student, he published an article entitled "A Description of Settlement Pattern and Population Movement on the Papago Reservation". In this article, he focuses on the linkage between economic changes and residential patterns as the Papago became less involved in "Subsistence Activities" and increasingly reliant on a cha-based economy. Jones completed his masters's in an anthropology in 1962 with the penning of his thesis mentor, he left Arizona and moved to Ithaca, New York, to begin his doctoral work.

At Cornell University, Jones minored in Asian Studies and archeology. Taking advantage of the program's strong Asian Studies focus, Jones chose Southeast Asia as his site for dissertation research. Initially, Jones prepared to do research among ethnic minorities in Burma. However, a fragile political stability in the country degenerated Inyo violent conflict, barring it as a possible research site. Given his investment in language training, Jones chose to do research among linguistically similar ethnic minority, the Lahu, in neighboring Thailand. In choosing Cornell at this time, Jones unwittingly positioned himself in an academic community influenced by CIA-Sponsored intelligence-gathering activities. In 1964, Jones was a PhD student focused on doing good research and completing his dissertation. For fourteen months he explored cultural variation moth the Lahu. Jones traveled to Thailand with his wife and children. The Jones family came to see that there was a significant American presence in Thailand associated with unspoken activities, and it soon became apparent to Jones that covert operations were taking place the region. Jones completed his research and went on to finish his dissertation, earning his doctoral degree in 1967.[2]

Books & Publications[edit]

  • 1970 "Towards a Native Anthropology."[5]
  • Applied Anthropology and the Application of Anthropological Knowledge 1976-10-01, Vol.35 (3), p. 221-229.[6]
  • "The community and organizations in the community."[7]
  • In Leith Mullings, ed., Urban Anthropology in the United States (1987).[8]
  • "The culture of achievement among the poor: the case of mothers and children in a Head Start Program."[9]
  • Critique of Anthropology13(3):247-266; "Epilogue."[9]
  • In Faye V Harrison, ed., Decolonizing Anthropology. Second edition (1997).[10]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Susser, Ida S. (September 2000). "Delmos Jones (1936-1999)". American Anthropologist. 102 (3): 581–583. doi:10.1525/aa.2000.102.3.581. ISSN 0002-7294.
  2. ^ a b c d Winn, Alisha R. (2018-10-15), "Ira E. Harrison", The Second Generation of African American Pioneers in Anthropology, University of Illinois Press, pp. 114–125, doi:10.5622/illinois/9780252042027.003.0009, ISBN 978-0-252-04202-7, S2CID 189012197, retrieved 2020-11-02
  3. ^ a b c "Miscellaneous Obituaries of Anthropologists". www.obitcentral.com. Retrieved 2020-11-02.
  4. ^ "Dad Gets Turned Down by the US ARMY - Delmos Jones". 21 June 2022.
  5. ^ Jones, Delmos (December 1970). "Towards a Native Anthropology". Human Organization. 29 (4): 251–259. doi:10.17730/humo.29.4.717764244331m4qv. ISSN 0018-7259.
  6. ^ Jones, Delmos (September 1976). "Applied Anthropology and the Application of Anthropological Knowledge". Human Organization. 35 (3): 221–229. doi:10.17730/humo.35.3.y213k20u551876n6. ISSN 0018-7259.
  7. ^ Susser, Ida S. (September 2000). "Delmos Jones (1936-1999)". American Anthropologist. 102 (3): 581–583. doi:10.1525/aa.2000.102.3.581. ISSN 0002-7294.
  8. ^ Adams, Graham (1988). "Mullings, Leith., ed. Cities of the United States: Studies in Urban Anthropology. New York: Columbia University Press, 1987. Pp. xii, 342. $40.00 (US)". Urban History Review. 17 (2): 134. doi:10.7202/1017670ar. ISSN 0703-0428.
  9. ^ a b Jones, Delmos J. (September 1993). "The Culture ofAchievementAmong the Poor". Critique of Anthropology. 13 (3): 247–266. doi:10.1177/0308275x9301300304. ISSN 0308-275X. S2CID 144757288.
  10. ^ Jones, Delmos J. (2008-01-08). "Anthropology and the Oppressed: A Reflection on "Native" Anthropology". NAPA Bulletin. 16 (1): 58–70. doi:10.1525/napa.1995.16.1.58. ISSN 1556-4789.