Description
Papers of Barbara G. Myerhoff, a University of
Southern California professor and noted anthropologist, consist of
manuscripts, notes, printed material, publications, audiotapes,
correspondence, and photographic material related to her teaching, field
research, and publishing activities.
Background
Barbara Gay Myerhoff was born on February 16, 1935 in Cleveland, Ohio.
She received a B.A. degree in Sociology from the University of California,
Los Angeles in 1958, a M.A. in Human Development at the University of
Chicago in 1963, and returned to the University of California, Los Angeles
to receive her Ph.D. in Anthropology in 1968. Myerhoff taught
in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Southern California
for the duration of her professional career. Her areas of research
included the Huichol Indians of Mexico; youth movements of the 1960s;
ritual and symbols; performance and narrative; women, feminism, and
friendship; and aging and ethnicity among Jewish communities in Los
Angeles. A prolific writer and researcher, Myerhoff edited and
authored several monographs in addition to numerous articles and essays,
and contributed to major collaborative projects on aging and ethnicity. In
the 1970s, Barbara G. Myerhoff began an extensive study of the elderly
Jewish immigrants living in Venice, California. Her award-winning
documentary film and book of the same title, Number Our Days, showed how
aging Eastern European immigrants made everyday life meaningful, surviving
amidst hardship, invisibility and poverty. She redefined academic and
public perceptions of the elderly and was a pioneer in her scholarship on
women and religion. Her research took a personal turn with her final
documentary, In Her Own Time, which documented Myerhoff's fatal cancer
diagnosis and her participation in Hasidic healing rituals. In addition to
the above, Myerhoff was also a consulting editor to Parabola (a
journal of myths and traditions), a lecturer at the Center for the Healing
Arts in Westwood, California, and a consultant and lecturer for
psychiatric residents in the Department of Social Psychiatry at the Los
Angeles County General Hospital. Barbara Gay Myerhoff died on January 7, 1985 at the age
49.