Lynd, Robert S. and Lynd, Helen Merrell 1892-1970, 1896-1982
LYND, ROBERT S. AND LYND, HELEN MERRELL 1892-1970, 1896-1982
Sociologists
Pioneer Sociologists
With their two groundbreaking studies of American life, Middletown (1929) and Middle-town in Transition (1937), Robert S. and Helen Merrell Lynd helped found the field of modern sociology. Their research made available for the first time an in-depth account of how average Americans lived their daily lives during the 1920s.
Background
Robert Staughton Lynd was born in New Albany, Indiana, and raised in Louisville, Kentucky. He graduated from Princeton in 1914 and for four years served as the managing editor of Publishers' Weekly. Following a year of service in World War I, Lynd worked briefly for Charles Scribner's Sons and The Freeman Magazine before entering Union Theological Seminary. Helen Merrell was born in La Grange, Illinois, and attended Wellesley College, from which she graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1919. For two years she taught in girls' schools in New York, where she met Robert Lynd. They were married in 1922. After Robert Lynd received his divinity degree in 1923, the Lynds became missionaries in the oil fields of Montana. Their experiences in the oil fields convinced them of the inequities in American society, and their interests shifted from religion to sociology. In the mid 1920s Robert Lynd directed a series of "Small City" studies for the Institute of Social and Religious Research. As a result of these studies, he and his wife were selected to conduct a study of religious life in Muncie, Indiana. They found it impossible to focus solely on the single aspect of religion in community life and instead wrote a sweeping study of the community as a whole.
Middletown
The Lynds' first book was intended to be a factual, objective description of all aspects of life in Muncie, Indiana. They selected the city because they found it to be as representative as possible of average American life in the 1920s. The Lynds and a small team of researchers spent eighteen months—from January 1924 to June 1925—conducting interviews, compiling statistics, and distributing surveys to the city's residents. The published book examined such aspects of everyday life as earning a living, making a home, training children, and engaging in leisure and recreational activities. The study reflects the 1920s' concern with analyzing and describing American society. Though the Lynds did not moralize or attempt to evaluate the propriety of what they
found, the book devotes much attention to the values and beliefs of Middletown's residents and depicts a materialistic elite, conspicuous consumption, and sharp class differences within the city.
Reception
Though the city is referred to throughout not as Muncie but as Middletown, Muncie residents identified themselves easily and denounced the study as slanted and disparaging. Middletown, however, gained instant popularity, with six printings in 1929, Its success created a demand for more social surveys and led other researchers to begin compiling facts about life in the United States. The book, moreover, was seized upon by writers and social critics as evidence of the vacuity and sterility of American culture.
Academic Sociology
Although Robert Lynd had no formal training as sociologist, Middletown created for him a reputation as a leading figure in the modern social sciences. In 1930 he became the secretary of the Social Science Research Council, a body organized to promote research and foster cooperations between anthropologists, economists, historians, statisticians, and sociologists. In 1931 Lynd joined the faculty of Columbia University as professor of sociology. His emphasis on research and "down-to-earth" methodology brought him into conflict with colleagues who advocated abstract theory, but Lynd's career at Columbia was instrumental in establishing sociology as an accepted academic discipline.
Return to Middletown
In the mid 1930s Robert and Helen Lynd returned to Muncie, Indiana, to investigate how the city had changed as a result of the Depression. Unlike its predecessor, Middletown in Transition was less descriptive and did not aim for detached objectivity. The Lynds instead focused on social change in the city, particularly the effects of industrialization and class stratification. The book analyzed the economic and social power structure of the city and was critical of the dominance of a small number of powerful families over the lives of Muncie's residents.
Contributions
Though they published no more major studies, both of the Lynds enjoyed long teaching careers, Robert Lynd at Columbia University and Helen Lynd at Sarah Lawrence College, and contributed to sociological journals and nonacademic periodicals such as The Nation. Helen Lynd became active in academic reform, arguing for interdisciplinary curricula, flexible scheduling, and the replacement of grades with written evaluations.
Sources:
John Madge, The Origins of Scientific Sociology (New York: Free Press of Glencoe, 1962);
Charles H. Page, Fifty Years in the Sociological Enterprise: A Lucky Journey (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1982);
"Robert S. Lynd, Co-Author of 'Middletown,' Dies/* New York Times, 3 November 1970, p. 38.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
"Lynd, Robert S. and Lynd, Helen Merrell 1892-1970, 1896-1982." American Decades. The Gale Group, Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (November 29, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3468300902.html
"Lynd, Robert S. and Lynd, Helen Merrell 1892-1970, 1896-1982." American Decades. The Gale Group, Inc. 2001. Retrieved November 29, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3468300902.html
Learn more about citation styles
|
Nitrate Control of Root Hydraulic Properties in Plants: Translating Local Information to Whole Plant Response1[OA]
Magazine article from: Plant Physiology; 10/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...to acquire mobile nutrients such as nitrate. Whereas proliferation of roots might help in the longer term, nitrate-rich patches can shift rapidly with...Here, we report that variation in nitrate concentration around roots induces an...
|
|
Nitrates Q&A.
News Wire article from: Yakima Herald-Republic (Yakima, WA); 10/12/2008; 700+ words
; ...underground can also influence nitrate concentration. How do nitrates reach underground drinking water? Nitrate-rich manure overapplied...frequent testing. Is nitrate pollution a new problem? No. Because nitrates are stable, they can...
|
|
Nitrates Q&A
Newspaper article from: Yakima Herald-Republic; 10/12/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...underground can also influence nitrate concentration. How do nitrates reach underground drinking water? Nitrate-rich manure overapplied...frequent testing. Is nitrate pollution a new problem? No. Because nitrates are stable, they can...
|
|
Calcium ammonium nitrate: warm shelter for the nitrate industry in the cold financial "winter".(Inorganics)
Magazine article from: China Chemical Reporter; 2/26/2009; ; 700+ words
; Calcium ammonium nitrate is a new kind of highly effective compound fertilizer...without causing the soil to agglomerate. Both nitrate nitrogen and ammoniate nitrogen are in the calcium ammonium nitrate. Moreover, it contains water-soluble calcium...
|
|
Nitrate intake does not influence bladder cancer risk: the Netherlands Cohort Study.(Research)
Magazine article from: Environmental Health Perspectives; 10/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...nitroso compounds, endogenously formed from nitrate-derived nitrite, are suspected to be...carcinogens. However, the association between nitrate exposure from food or drinking water and...We evaluated the associations between nitrate exposure and bladder cancer in the Netherlands...
|
|
Nitrate pollution and sustainable agriculture.
Magazine article from: Nitrogen & Methanol; 9/1/1998; 700+ words
; ...the nitrite ions to nitrate. Denitrification is the process in which nitrates are reduced to gaseous...thoroughly remove all nitrates from the soil. No nitrate is naturally added...health effects of nitrates Nitrate concentrations...
|
|
Nitrate, nitrate everywhere.... (legislation in Great Britain forces water companies to reduce nitrate levels) (Special Issue - Environmental Protection)
Magazine article from: Process Engineering; 3/22/1991; ; 700+ words
; NITRATE, NITRATE EVERYWHERE. . . The water companies are having act to cut nitrate levels in drinking water. Keith Allott asks if the health risks are real, and looks at the measures being taken to tackle the problem. |There is a strong feeling...
|
|
Nitrates can be toxic after rain.
Magazine article from: Feedstuffs; 9/12/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...forages are prone to nitrate toxicity. "The problem...when the plant takes up nitrates from the soil but doesn...risk for accumulating nitrates are drought-stressed...moisture to convert nitrates. Nitrate toxicity is also a problem...
|
|
NITRATE LEVELS RISING SHARPLY IN PASSAIC RIVER
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 4/21/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...for addressing nitrates and other issues. The nitrate reading of water...Geological Survey. Nitrates are considered...drought, the nitrate reading at the...unsafe levels of nitrates. "This is due...percent of ingested nitrate is transformed...
|
|
Dietary nitrate: where is the risk?(Correspondence)
Magazine article from: Environmental Health Perspectives; 8/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...conclude that dietary nitrates elevate a single health...explored before changes to nitrate water quality standards...confidently say that nitrates are not the threat...drinking water MCL for nitrates to 20 ppm nitrate-N to reflect the...
|
|
Nitrates
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
NITRATES NITRATES. Nitrate (NO 3 ) is a compound of the elements nitrogen and...large loads also come from livestock operations and nitrate fertilizer runoff from farm-land. Nitrates infiltrate ground water as well as surface waters...
|
|
nitrate
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...compound containing the nitrate (NO 3 ) radical . Nitrates are salts or esters...important inorganic nitrates are potassium nitrate (KNO 3 ), sodium...NO 3 ). Calcium nitrate is used in fertilizers...barium and strontium nitrates are used to color...
|
|
Gallium Nitrate
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer
Gallium nitrate Definition Gallium nitrate is a drug that is used to treat hyper-calcemia , or too much...occur when individuals develop various types of cancer. Gallium nitrate is also known by the common brand name Ganite. Purpose The purpose...
|
|
Potassium Nitrate
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
Potassium Nitrate Potassium nitrate, also known as saltpeter or niter, is a chemical compound consisting...shell primers, hand-grenade fuses, and fireworks. Potassium nitrate consists of three basic chemical elements: potassium a soft...
|
|
sodium nitrate
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
sodium nitrate chemical compound, NaNO 3 , a colorless...compound that closely resembles potassium nitrate (saltpeter or niter) in appearance and...alcohol, and liquid ammonia. Sodium nitrate is also called soda niter or Chile saltpeter...
|