French anthropologist Levi-Strauss dies at 100
By Estelle Shirbon
PARIS (Reuters) - French intellectual Claude Levi-Strauss, the founder of structural anthropology, has died at the age of 100, his publishing house Plon said on Tuesday.
Levi-Strauss, who was known to a wider public thanks to his 1955 memoir and masterpiece, "Tristes Tropiques", died on Saturday. He would have turned 101 on Nov. 28.
"He was France's greatest scientist," said writer Jean d'Ormesson, fellow member of the Academie Francaise which brings together the elite of the country's intellectual establishment.
A brilliant student who excelled at geology, law and philosophy, Levi-Strauss was posted to Brazil as a professor in 1935. It was there that he found his vocation for anthropology.
He conducted several expeditions into remote areas of the Amazon rainforest and the Mato Grosso to study the customs of local tribes, starting to develop theories and methods that would later have a profound impact on his field.
He returned to France and was drafted into the French army at the start of World War Two. After the defeat of France by the Nazis, he realised that being Jewish had now become dangerous and he moved to the United States until 1944.
Over the following years, he held a number of prestigious scientific posts in Paris and New York and started to churn out his influential scientific volumes.
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