Whorf, Benjamin Lee, 1897-1941
Variant namesLinguist: received a Social Science Research Fellowship for a field trip to Mexico, 1930; studied at Yale University with Edward Sapir, 1931-1936; lecturer on anthropology at Yale, 1937-1938; author of numerous articles on languages, linguistics, science and religion.
From the description of Benjamin Lee Whorf papers, 1914-1957 (inclusive). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 145078609
From the description of Benjamin Lee Whorf papers, 1898-1957 (inclusive). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702182476
Benjamin Lee Whorf, linguist: born 1897, received a Social Science Research Fellowship for a field trip to Mexico, 1930; studied at Yale University with Edward Sapir, 1931-1936; lecturer on anthropology at Yale, 1937-1938; author of numerous articles on languages, linguistics, science and religion, died 1941.
Benjamin Lee Whorf had a brief but important career as a pioneering scholar of the Nahuatl, Maya, and Hopi languages and as a theoretician about the influence of language on thought and perception. Researchers should consult Language, Thought, and Reality for a biographical sketch and bibliography by John B. Carroll,¹ but these are some principal events and periods in his life:
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1897:
born in Winthrop, Massachusetts -
1918:
received the B.S. in chemical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology -
1919 -1941 :employed as a fire prevention engineer by the Hartford Fire Insurance Company -
1920:
married Celia Inez Peckham -
[1924 -1928] :studied Hebrew -
1925:
wrote "Why I Have Discarded Evolution" -
1928:
read "Aztec Linguistics" and "An Aztec Account of the Period of the Toltec Decline" at the Twenty-Third International Congress of Americanists -
1930:
took a field trip to Mexico, supported by the Social Science Research Council -
1931:
began studies with Edward Sapir at Yale University -
1932:
began his linguistic analysis of Hopi -
1933:
published The Phonetic Basis of Certain Characters in Maya Writing -
1936:
published his first article on Hopi, "The punctual and segmentative aspects of Hopi," in Language -
1937 -1938 :was a Lecturer in Anthropology at Yale -
1940 -1941 :published three articles for a non-professional audience in Technology Review -
1941:
died on July 26 after some months' illness
¹Benjamin Lee Whorf, Language, Thought and Reality: Selected Writings of Benjamin Lee Whorf, Comp. John B. Carroll, (Cambridge, Mass.: The M. I. T. Press, 1956).
From the guide to the Benjamin Lee Whorf papers, 1898-1971, (Manuscripts and Archives)
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Mexico | |||
Mexico | |||
Mexico |
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Anthropology |
Aztec language |
Hebrew language |
Hopi language |
Indians of Central America |
Indians of Central America |
Indians of Mexico |
Indians of Mexico |
Indians of North America |
Language and languages |
Linguistics |
Mayan languages |
Mayan languages |
Mayas |
Nahuatl language |
Religion and science |
Semitic languages |
Occupation |
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Activity |
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Person
Birth 1897-04-24
Death 1941-07-26
Americans
English