Oswald Werner Collection

Mss.497.3.W50

Date: 1963-1964 | Size: 0.25 Linear feet

Abstract

The anthropologist Oswald Werner was a member of the faculty at Northwestern University from 1963 until his retirement in 1998. A student of Navajo language and culture, he had a particular interest in Navajo medicine and science. The Werner Collection consists of two of Oswald Werner's early works on Navajo language and culture: his dissertation, "A typological comparison of four trader Navaho speakers" (Indiana University, 1963) and a paper "The Navaho ethnomedical domain: prolegomena to a componential semantic analysis" (1964).

Background note

Born in Rimavska Sobota in the Slovak Republic in 1928, the anthropologist Oswald Werner emigrated to the United States after the Second World War. Having received a bachelor's degree in Applied Physics from the Technische Hochschule in Stuttgart in 1950, he eaarned his MA in Anthropology from Syracuse University and doctorate in Anthropology and Linguistics from Indiana University. His dissertation, "A Typological Comparison of Four Trader Navaho Speakers" (1963), was the first in a long list of contributions to the study of Navajo language and culture that included particularly important work in Navajo medicine, botany, and science.

Werner was a member of the Anthropology Department at Northwestern University from 1963 until his retirement in 1998, serving as chair of the Department from 1978-1983 and 1987-1989. His tenure was marked by a deep concern for cultural anthropological methodology. In addition to serving as editor of Cultural Anthropological Methods, he was author of Systematic Fieldwork (Newbury Park, Calif., 1987), and was founder and director of the Northwestern University Ethnographic Field School in 1974. Situated on the Navajo Reservation in New Mexico, the Field School provides both undergraduates and graduate students exposure to ethnographic field methods and working in partnership with local communities.

Scope and content

The Werner Collection consists of two of Oswald Werner's early works on Navajo language and culture: his doctoral dissertation in anthropology, "A typological comparison of four trader Navaho speakers" (Indiana University, 1963) and a paper "The Navaho ethnomedical domain: prolegomena to a componential semantic analysis" (1964). The latter contains Navajo terms for diseases, the dimensions of intensity, temporal duration, and spatial extension.

Collection Information

Provenance

Gift of Oswald Werner, 1962.

Preferred citation

Cite as: Oswald Werner Collection, American Philosophical Society.

Processing information

Recatalogued by rsc, 2003.

Related material

Other material on Navajo language and culture can be located through the Online Guide to American Indian Materials at the APS.

Indexing Terms


Genre(s)

  • Dissertations.

Subject(s)

  • Indians of North America -- Languages
  • Navajo Indians -- Medicine
  • Navajo language


Detailed Inventory

 Werner, Oswald.
The Navaho ethnomedical domain: prolegomena to a componential semantic analysis
1964Typed D. 20p.and 14p. preliminary work sheets.; TMsS, 34p.

Provenance: Presented by the author; March 1964.

Mss.497.3.W50.1 Werner, Oswald.
A typological comparison of four trader Navaho speakers
1963Typed D. [5],xiv,153p.; TMsS, 153p.

Ph.D. thesis in department of Anthropology, Indiana Univ.; May 1963.

Provenance: Presented by author; March 1964.