He initially studied zoology, but he changed his focus to anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, under the influence of Alfred L. Kroeber, who became his "principal teacher, mentor, and friend".[1] Strong completed his doctorate in 1926.
Career
Strong's doctoral dissertation, "An Analysis of Southwestern Society", was published in American Anthropologist.[2] A related study of his, Aboriginal Society in Southern California,[3] presenting his detailed fieldwork among the Serrano, Luiseño, Cupeño, and Cahuilla peoples, has been characterized as "one of the earliest and one of the best efforts by a United States anthropologist to combine structural-functional analysis with historical data and interpretation".[1]: ix Strong also conducted ethnographic field research among the Naskapi of Labrador.[citation needed]
Most of Strong's anthropological contributions were specifically in archaeology. His 1935 study, "An Introduction to Nebraska Archaeology",[4] is credited with providing a major impetus for the direct historical approach in archaeology.[5]
^ abBeals, Ralph L. (1972). "Forward". Aboriginal Society in Southern California, by William Duncan Strong. Banning, California: Malki Museum Press. pp. vii–ix.
^Strong, William Duncan (1929). "Aboriginal Society in Southern California". University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. 1 (358). Berkeley: University of California.
^Strong, William Duncan. "An Introduction to Nebraska Archaeology". Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections. 93 (10). Washington, DC.