Marshall D. Sahlins, titan of anthropology, 1930–2021

April 12, 2021 (last updated on December 10, 2024)

Marshall D. Sahlins

This article was originally published by UChicago News. Read the story on their site here.

Prolific scholar and activist remembered for academic influence and personal warmth

Marshall D. Sahlins, an eminent cultural anthropologist of the Pacific known for sparking lively academic debates, died April 5. He was 90.

Renowned for his prolific contributions to anthropology, Sahlins was the Charles F. Grey Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at the University of Chicago. For decades, he studied the history and ethnography of communities in Hawaii, Fiji and other islands in the South Pacific during the period of European contact—engaging his research with indigenous political structures, modes of kinship and conceptions of nature.
For Sahlins, anthropology was both a privilege and an adventure, offering an opportunity to “reproduce within one’s mind the way the world is put together for other people,” he said during a 2014 appearance at the Chicago Humanities Festival.
 

Prof. Emeritus Marshall Sahlins
Prof. Emeritus Marshall Sahlins

“Anthropology, in some ways, has an even better chance of truth than physics—because truth is human, and so are you,” Sahlins added in an interview last year.

Born Dec. 27, 1930, in Chicago, Sahlins received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in anthropology from the University of Michigan in 1951 and 1952, and his doctorate from Columbia University in 1954. He joined the University of Chicago faculty in 1973, after teaching at Michigan for more than 15 years and working in Paris for two.

Over the course of his career, Sahlins sought to de-center Western epistemic paradigms in anthropology, challenging ideas from sociobiology and capitalist economic theory by contending that cultural factors—as opposed to biology and self-interested competition—were key to shaping patterns of human behavior and development.


French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, himself called a father of modern anthropology, once wrote of Sahlins: “He now stands as a sage among anthropologists, maybe the last one.”

Famous for his love of academic discourse, for several years Sahlins publicly debated Princeton University scholar Gananath Obeyesekere about the way indigenous Hawaiians perceived British explorer James Cook during the series of encounters that ultimately led to Cook’s deathThe debate raised important questions about whether and how Western scholars should understand indigenous viewpoints.

“Sahlins made fundamental contributions to the anthropology of history, economy and culture,” wrote Prof. Joseph P. Masco in a message to UChicago’s Department of Anthropology, which he chairs. “His enduring interest was to show how cultural difference works in history and how history shapes culture, and to argue for the fundamental value and rigor of indigenous modes of thought.”
 

“Anthropology, in some ways, has an even better chance of truth than physics—because truth is human, and so are you.”
—Prof. Emeritus Marshall D. Sahlins


In addition to his academic work, Sahlins was politically active throughout his life. As an anti-war activist, in 1965 he originated the concept of the teach-in, a form of nonviolent protest that brought together students and faculty to question U.S. wars and policies. Teach-ins were widely emulated across the country during the Vietnam War.

Sahlins is remembered by colleagues and former students for his wit, humor and generosity.

“That he combined such humility with a famous pugnaciousness is perhaps a paradox, but I think those who worked closely with him would agree with me that the latter never eclipsed the former,” said Daniel Rosenblatt, PhD’03, now a professor of anthropology at Carleton University. “One of my favorite jokes of his was about the nature of an academic career: ‘In the long run,’ he said, ‘We all die and we are all wrong. A good career is when the former happens before the latter.’ For me at least, he (mostly) achieved that.”

“Despite being one of the best known and most influential anthropologists of all time, Marshall was incredibly down-to-earth as a person,” said Rice University anthropologist Dominic Boyer, AM’94, PhD’00. “He treated his students with respect and warmth and loved to reminisce, joke and laugh. What I learned above all from him is that you don’t have to sacrifice being a well-rounded and caring person to be very good at what you do.”

Alex Golub, AM’97, PhD’06, a former student who now teaches at the University of Hawaii, added: “The world would be a better place if everyone had Marshall’s clarity and integrity.”

 

Marshall Sahlins pictured in 2013 enjoying a pastrami sandwich
Born and raised in Chicago, Marshall Sahlins’ favorite lunch spot was Manny’s Cafeteria and Delicatessan. He is pictured in 2013 enjoying a pastrami sandwich. Photo by Alan Thomas


Sahlins was the author of 19 books and more than 100 articles and essays, including Stone Age Economics (1972), in which he pushed back against the idea that hunter-gatherer societies suffered from a lack of resources, suggesting that they were instead relatively affluent. Other notable works include Islands of History (1985), Anahulu: The Anthropology of History in the Kingdom of Hawaii (1992, with Patrick Kirch), Culture in Practice (2000), What Kinship is—and is Not (2012) and On Kings (2017, with his former student David Graeber).

For his writing, he became the first person to win the Gordon J. Laing Award twice: in 1977 for Culture and Practical Reason, and in 1997 for How “Natives” Think: About Captain Cook, For Example. Given annually by the University of Chicago Press as its highest honor, the prize recognizes the faculty member who writes, edits or translates the book that has brought the Press the most distinction in the three preceding years.
 

“Despite being one of the best known and most influential anthropologists of all time, Marshall was incredibly down-to-earth as a person.”
—Dominic Boyer, AM’94, PhD’00


After his retirement in 1997, Sahlins continued to write and conduct research full-time while serving as publisher of Prickly Paradigm Press, which produced pamphlets on contemporary questions in anthropology. Just before his death, he finished The New Science of the Enchanted Universe, a world ethnography of non-Western cultures—most of humanity—forthcoming from Princeton University Press in 2022.   

Among Sahlins’ many honors were memberships in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the British Academy, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Awarded the Chevalier de l’Ordre de Arts et des Lettres by the French Ministry of Culture in 2011, Sahlins maintained connections to France throughout his life via numerous visits, collaborations and lectures. Two of the eight honorary doctorates he was awarded in his lifetime came from Parisian universities, while others came from Belgium, Canada and the United Kingdom.
 

Marshall Sahlins with his wife Barbara in the mid-1970s
Marshall Sahlins with his wife Barbara in the mid-1970s Courtesy of the Sahlins family


Sahlins is survived by his wife of 70 years, Barbara Sahlins; his three children, Julie, Peter and Elaine; his son-in-law Adam Siegman and his daughter-in-law Ramona Naddaff; his three grandchildren, Lily, Guthrie and Max; and his sister-in-law, Jane Sahlins. He was predeceased by his brother Bernard Sahlins, AB’43, a co-founder of The Second City.

“The Sahlins family mourns the loss of Marshall—dear husband, father and grandfather. We will miss his wit, charm and love,” said his son, Peter Sahlins.

Sahlins’ family has established a fund for an annual Marshall Sahlins Memorial Lecture to be administered by the Department of Anthropology at the University of Chicago. Information about a public memorial is forthcoming.