G. William(George William), Skinner 1925-2008.

Dates:
Birth 1925
Death 2008

Biographical notes:

G. William Skinner was born in Oakland, California, in 1925. From 1942-43, he attended Deeps Springs College (California), then joined the Navy V-12 Program at Missouri Valley College for two years before completing 18 months of instruction in Chinese at the U.S. Navy Oriental Language School at the University of Colorado. He then completed his Bachelor's degree at Cornell University (1946-47) with Distinction in Far Eastern Studies.

Skinner then went on to pursue doctoral studies in anthropology at Cornell University, with an interest in market towns and their regions in China. He began fieldwork at Gaodianzi, near Chengdu, Sichuan Province, in 1949, but this was disrupted when the Communists won the civil war in China. Skinner was forced to leave his fieldsite in January, 1950, and was confined to Chengdu until August, when he was allowed to leave China.

With the closing of China, Skinner shifted his attention to Chinese communities in Southeast Asia, with an initial field survey conducted in 1950. This was followed by a doctoral project on the Chinese of Thailand, completed in 1954 while he was also Field Director of the Cornell Southeast Asia Program in Bangkok (1951-55). Subsequently, he joined the Cornell Modern Indonesia Project as a Research Associate, and was in Indonesia from 1956-58 to conduct research on the Chinese of Indonesia and oversee related projects.

From 1958-60, Skinner was Assistant Professor of Sociology at Columbia University, before returning to Cornell as Associate Professor of Anthropology (1960-62) and then Professor of Anthropology (1962-65). It was during this time (1964-65) that he published his much celebrated "Marketing and Social Structure in Rural China" as three articles in successive issues of the Journal of Asian Studies, which established him as a preeminent scholar of China.

Subsequently, Skinner was appointed Professor of Anthropology at Stanford University (1965-89) and the University of California, Davis (1990-2005). He was also President of the Association of Asian Studies in 1983. Besides being noted as an eminent anthropologist of China, Skinner was best known for his work on the dynamics of social structure and space, which he applied to the study of China, Japan and France using geographic information system techniques. His work on hierarchical regional systems was also instrumental in the shaping of the China Historical Geographic Information System, which provides a database of populated places and historical administrative units throughout Chinese history.

The Skinner papers deposited with Cornell University mainly come from the Southeast Asia phase of his career. These include research materials collected for his seminal works on the Chinese of Thailand and Indonesia. These materials not only informed Skinner's understanding of Chinese culture and kinship dynamics, but also demonstrated his early interest in mapping sociological data onto geographical frameworks.

From the guide to the G. William Skinner papers, 1948-1988, 1951-1958 (bulk)., (Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library)

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Subjects:

  • Chinese

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Thailand. (as recorded)
  • Indonesia. (as recorded)