"One day will come when the idea that, in order to sustain itself, the men of the past grew and slaughtered living beings and then candidly exposed their flesh chopped into pieces in window displays will inspire, without a doubt, the same repulsion that the early travelers of the XVIth and XVIIth century experienced while witnessing the cannibalistic customs of primitive American, Oceanic or African civilizations."
Claude Levi-Strauss
Claude Lévi-Strauss (1908–2009) was a French anthropologist and ethnologist, and has been called, along with James George Frazer and Franz Boas, the "father of modern anthropology".
He argued that the "savage" mind had the same structures as the "civilized" mind and that human characteristics are the same everywhere. These observations culminated in his famous book "Tristes Tropiques", which positioned him as one of the central figures in the structuralist school of thought, where his ideas reached into fields including the humanities, sociology and philosophy.
Lévi-Strauss's theories are set forth in "Structural Anthropology" or "Structuralism" (1958).
Briefly, he considers culture a system of symbolic communication that is to be investigated with methods.
"Structuralism" has been defined as "the search for the underlying patterns of thought in all forms of human activity."
The basis of the structural anthropology of Lévi-Strauss is the idea that the human brain systematically processes organised, that is to say structured, units of information that combine and recombine to create models that sometimes explain the world we live in, sometimes suggest imaginary alternatives, and sometimes give tools with which to operate in it.
The task of the anthropologist, for Lévi-Strauss, is not to account for why a culture takes a particular form, but to understand and illustrate the principles of organisation that underlie the onward process of transformation that occurs as carriers of the culture solve problems that are either practical or purely intellectual.
He was honored by universities throughout the world and held the chair of Social Anthropology at the "Collège de France" (1959–1982); he was elected a member of the "Académie Française" in 1973.
Claude Levi-Strauss was famous for strong and straight-forward statements, sometimes apppearing rather judgmental, such as: "The first thing we see as we travel round the world is our own filth, thrown into the face of mankind."