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Carol Laderman Papers

National Museum of Natural History

Object Details

Creator
Laderman, Carol
Place
Kampong Merchang (Terengganu)
Malaysia
Topic
Traditional medicine
Shamanism
Malay language
Language and languages -- Documentation
Medical anthropology
Malays (Asian people) -- Medicine
Seances
Pregnancy -- Nutritional aspects
Midwifery
Ethnology -- Malaysia
Provenance
These papers were donated to the National Anthropological Archives by Carol Laderman's sons, Raphael and Michael Laderman in 2012.
Creator
Laderman, Carol
Culture
Malays (Asian people)
See more items in
Carol Laderman Papers
Sponsor
Digitization and preparation of these materials for online access has been funded through generous support from the Arcadia Fund.
Summary
Carol Laderman was a medical anthropologist best known for her research on Malay traditional medicine. Her work focused on beliefs and practices regarding childbirth and nutrition as well as shamanic healing practices in rural Malaysia. This collection consists of the professional papers of Carol Laderman, medical anthropologist and university professor. The bulk of the collection pertains to her research on childbirth, nutrition, and shamanic healing practices in rural Malaysia. These materials include field notes, surveys, transcripts of Main Peteri ceremonies, grant applications, photographs, and sound recordings. Of special interest are her photographs of midwives and shamans treating patients, including Main Peteri ceremonies, as well as traditional Malay weddings and festivals. Also noteworthy are her recordings of Main Peteri ceremonies and her interviews with midwives and shamans. The collection also contains her unpublished and published writings; her dissertation; a report on her undergraduate fieldwork with pregnant Puerto Rican teenagers; her lecture notes and files as a university professor; files documenting her involvement in professional associations; and correspondence with colleagues.
Biographical/Historical note
Carol Laderman was a medical anthropologist best known for her research on Malay traditional medicine. Her work focused on beliefs and practices regarding childbirth and nutrition as well as shamanic healing practices in rural Malaysia. Laderman (née Cohen) was born on October 25, 1932 in Brooklyn, New York. When she was 6, her father changed their family's surname to Ciavati due to his difficulty as a Jew finding an engineering job. Laderman grew up with musical aspirations, intending to become a concert pianist. She attended the High School of Music and Art in Manhattan and majored in music at Brooklyn College. In 1953, she married Gabriel Laderman, a painter and later an art professor. She took a leave from college to follow her husband after he was drafted into the U.S. Army five months following their wedding. Her hiatus from college spanned fifteen years, during which time she had two sons (1958, 1965). She also worked as a legal secretary in Ithaca, New York, and as a social secretary and translator for an opera singer when she and her family lived in Italy. After returning to New York City, she enrolled in evening classes at Hunter College. Although she planned to resume her studies in music, her academic focus changed after taking an anthropology course taught by medical anthropologist Rena Gropper. In 1972, she earned her B.A. in Anthropology, and with the assistance of a Danforth Foundation Fellowship, she attended graduate school at Columbia University, where she earned her Ph.D. in Anthropology in 1979. As an undergraduate student, Laderman conducted fieldwork at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York City (1972-1973), assisting in a project on pregnant teenagers and nutritional health. She was assigned to collect data on Puerto Rican adolescent mothers, which exposed her to humoral beliefs in food, medicine, and people. This experience would later inspire her to conduct her graduate fieldwork on nutrition and childbirth in Malaysia, where humoral beliefs were also held but not well-explored by researchers. From 1975 to 1977, Laderman and her family lived in Merchang, in Trengganu (now Terengganu), Malaysia. Working under the auspices of the Malaysian Ministry of Health of the Institute for Medical Research, Laderman studied both traditional and hospital-based medicine. As part of her fieldwork, she received training from a hospital to collect blood samples to study the effects of birthing and dietary practices on women's health. She also apprenticed herself to a traditional midwife (bidan kampung), whom she assisted in a number of births. By comparing food ideologies and actual food intake of pregnant and postpartum women, Laderman was able to refute the prevailing view of scholars that malnutrition among rural Malays was largely due to dietary restrictions based on the humoral system. In her dissertation, "Conceptions and Preconceptions: Childbirth and Nutrition in Rural Malaysia," Laderman describes how Malay women adapt their diets to their needs and that their customs allow for interpretation and manipulation. In 1983, a revised version of her dissertation was published as Wives and Midwives: Childbirth and Nutrition in Rural Malaysia. While seeking to gain an understanding of traditional Malay medicine in its entirety, Laderman also became exposed to theatrical spirit séances known as Main Peteri (also Puteri or Teri). At that time Main Peteri was no longer performed in most Malaysian states but was still thriving in Trengganu and nearby Kelantan. Performed primarily as healing ceremonies by shamans (bomoh), Main Peteri was a last resort for the afflicted. These performances were characterized by entranced patients, spirit possessions, singing, music, dancing, and an audience. Laderman attended and participated in a number of these ceremonies and became a student and adopted daughter to a shaman. She recorded and transcribed several Main Peteri performances and received an NEH grant (1981-1985) to translate the texts. She also returned to Merchang in 1982 to conduct further research on traditional healing ceremonies. In her monograph Taming the Wind of Desire (1991), she discusses Main Peteri and its relationship to the Malay concept of Inner Winds (angin), which determine a person's personality, talents, and drives. In 1987 to 1990, she returned to her musical roots to collaborate with ethnomusicologist Marina Roseman to transcribe, analyze, and interpret the music of Main Peteri. Together, she and Roseman also edited The Performance of Healing (1996). In addition, Laderman became interested in the effects of urbanization and globalization on traditional Malay healing practices, a topic which she addressed in a collection of her writings, The Life and Death of Traditional Malay Medicine (in press). Laderman was a professor at the Department of Anthropology at City University of New York City College (1990-2010). She was also an associate professor at Fordham University (1982-1990) and taught briefly at Hunter College (1978-1980), Brooklyn College (1979-1980), and Yale University (1980-1982). She died on July 6, 2010 at the age of 77. Sources Consulted [Autobiographical statement], Series 2. Writings, Carol Laderman Papers, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution 1972. Carol Laderman, SGS Student, Wins Danforth Fellowship. SGS Newsletter 2(7): 1. Laderman, Carol. 1983. Wives and Midwives: Childbirth and Nutrition in Rural Malaysia. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. Laderman, Carol. 1991. Taming the Wind of Desire: Psychology, Medicine, and Aesthetics in Malay Shamanistic Performance. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. Maizura, Intan. 2003, September 28. A bidan, a bomoh & a New Yorker. Nuance: 16-18. Roseman, Marina, Laurel Kendall and Robert Knox Dentan. 2011. Obituaries: Carol Laderman (1932-2010). American Anthropologist 113(2): 375-377. 1932 -- Born October 25 in Brooklyn, New York 1953 -- Marries Gabriel Laderman and takes a leave from Brooklyn College 1972 -- Earns B.A. in Anthropology from Hunter College 1972-1973 -- Conducts research at Mt. Sinai Hospital on ethnic eating patterns, food beliefs, and anemia in adolescent Puerto Rican mothers 1975-1977 -- Conducts fieldwork in Merchang in Trengganu, Malaysia 1979 -- Earns Ph.D. in Anthropology from Columbia University 1982 -- Returns to Malaysia to conduct fieldwork on shamanism and trance healing 1982-1988 -- Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, Fordham University 1988-1990 -- Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Fordham University 1990-2010 -- Professor, Department of Anthropology, City University of New York City College 2010 -- Dies on July 6
Extent
6 Linear feet ((15 boxes and 1 manuscript envelope) and 154 cassette tapes)
Date
1970-2009
Archival Repository
National Anthropological Archives
Identifier
NAA.2012-09
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Field notes
Sound recordings
Photographs
Citation
Carol Laderman Papers, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution
Arrangement
This collection is organized in 8 series: Series 1. Research, 1972, 1975-1977, 1981, 1985, 1987, 2000-2003, undated; Series 2. Writings, 1970, 1975, 1978-2001, 2004, undated; Series 3. Student Files, 1972, 1975, 1979, undated; Series 4. Teacher Files, 1977, 1979-1982, 2001-2002, 2007, undated; Series 5. Correspondence, 1974-1981, 1985-2005, 2009, undated; Series 6. Professional Activities, circa 1981, 1989-1990, 1994, 2004, undated; Series 7. Photographs, circa 1975-1977, circa 1982, undated; Series 8. Sound Recordings, 1976-1977, 1982, 2003, undated.
Processing Information
The papers of Carol Laderman were received largely unarranged. The processing archivist arranged and organized the collection into 8 series. Original folder titles were retained with titles assigned by the archivist placed within square brackets. The archivist would like to thank Catherine Carbone for her assistance in processing the collection.
Rights
Contact the repository for terms of use. Permission to use sound recordings of Main Peteri ceremonies transcribed and published in Taming the Wind of Desire must be obtained from Columbia University's Center for Ethnomusicology.
Selected Bibliography
1982 Giving Birth in a Malay Village. In Anthropology of Human Birth. Margarita A. Kay, ed. Pp. 81-100. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis. 1982 Putting Malay Women in Their Place. In Women in Southeast Asia. Occasional Paper, No. 9. Penny Van Esterik, ed. Pp 79-99. Dekalb, Illinois: Northern Illinois University Center for South East Asia Studies. 1983 Wives and Midwives: Childbirth and Nutrition in Rural Malaysia. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. 1988 Wayward Winds: Malay Archetypes and Theory of Personality in the Context of Shamanism. Social Science and Medicine 27(8): 799-810. 1991 Taming the Wind of Desire: Psychology, Medicine, and Aesthetics in Malay Shamanistic Performance. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. 1991 Main Peteri: Malay Shamanism. Kuala Lumpur: Federation Museums Journal Monograph. 1991 Malay Medicine, Malay Person. Medical Anthropology 13(1-2): 83-98. 1991 A Jewish Family in Muslim Malaysia. Review of Jewish Folklore and Ethnology. 13(1): 17-19. 1996 edited with Marina Roseman. The Performance of Healing. New York, New York: Routledge. 1997 The Limits of Magic. American Anthropologist 99(2): 331-341.
Genre/Form
Field notes
Sound recordings
Photographs
Scope and Contents
This collection consists of the professional papers of Carol Laderman, medical anthropologist and university professor. The bulk of the collection pertains to her research on childbirth, nutrition, and shamanic healing practices in rural Malaysia. These materials include field notes, surveys, transcripts of Main Peteri ceremonies, grant applications, photographs, and sound recordings. Of special interest are her photographs of midwives and shamans treating patients, including Main Peteri ceremonies, as well as traditional Malay weddings and festivals. Also noteworthy are her recordings of Main Peteri ceremonies and her interviews with midwives and shamans. The collection also contains her unpublished and published writings; her dissertation; a report on her undergraduate fieldwork with pregnant Puerto Rican teenagers; her lecture notes and files as a university professor; files documenting her involvement in professional associations; and correspondence with colleagues.
Restrictions
The Carol Laderman Papers are open for research. Access to the Carol Laderman Papers requires an appointment.
Related Materials
Two videotapes were received with the Carol Laderman papers and transferred to the Human Studies Film Archives. Some of Laderman's original field recordings are at Columbia University's Center for Ethnomusicology. Copies of those recording are in this collection and are so noted.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503511983858-1503511983878-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nw33834bd8d-479d-4d3c-ab0d-97f73a5a3609

In the Collection

Pages

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  • Wives and Midwives notes

  • Malay Shamans and Healers

  • CCNY Proposal - Tradition and Transition in Malay Medicine

  • Photos removed from loose album sleeves

  • Symbolic and empirical reality: a new approach to the analysis of food avoidances

  • Review by Laderman of Progress with Profit: The Development of Rural Banking in Indonesia

  • Prints of midwives, shamans, and Main Peteri

  • Testimonial letters for Laderman See also letter in Series 5. Correspondence, dated April 3, 1977

  • Photo of Laderman

  • Destructive Heat and Cooling Prayer: Malay Humoralism in Pregnancy, Childbirth and the Postpartum Period

  • Sex, Marriage and the Family

  • A Jewish Family in Muslim Malaysia

  • Introduction to Cultural Anthropology

  • Print of vendor selling rambutan fruit at Merchang night market

  • Field notes on edible wild plants

  • The Ambiguity of Symbols in the Structure of Healing

  • Danforth fellowship

  • Main Teri at Kuala Brang Mat Daud

  • Where the Wild Things Are

  • The Poetics of Healing in Malay Shamanistic Performances

  • Dissertation - Conceptions and Preconceptions: Childbirth and Nutrition in Rural Malaysia, 1 of 3

  • History of Theory of Anthropology

  • Fall 2007 Anthropology of Health and Healing

  • Main Teri for Toki Latif

  • CUNY Fellowship Application

  • General Anthropology

  • Dissertation - Conceptions and Preconceptions: Childbirth and Nutrition in Rural Malaysia, 2 of 3

  • The Performance of Healing - reviews

  • Jampi Incantations

  • Culture and Disease: A Critical History of Kuru

  • Housekeeping Report

  • Malay Inner Winds: Health, Personality, and Drive

  • Commentary: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Birth Practices

  • Report to the Social Science Research Council

  • Student Files

  • Review by Laderman of Primitive Polluters: Semang Impact on the Malaysian Tropical Rain Forest Ecosystem

  • Doctoral research plan

  • Wild vegetable consumption on the east coast of Peninsular Malaysia

  • Teaching Files

  • Untitled manuscripts

  • Notes on Main Teri

  • Trengganu dialect glossary

  • Giving Birth in a Malay village

  • Duplicates of field notes

  • Techniques of Healing in Southeast Asia

  • Survey of childbirth, childcare, and postpartum practices and beliefs, 3 of 3

  • NIH corrected budget

  • Annual listings of publications

  • Food Ideology and Behavior, Flexibility and "Rules to Break Rules"

  • Food Ideology and Eating Behavior: Contributions from Malay Studies

  • Writings

  • Humors Lecture

  • Fordham University application

  • The Ego, the ID, and the Winds of Desire

  • Articles regarding Laderman's research

  • Main Teri - Breaking Contracts

  • Main Teri with Laderman's participation

  • The Mapping of a Difficult Terrain: Childbirth as a rite of Passage in Malaysia

  • Wind, Life and Health conference

  • Review by Laderman of Latah in Southeast Asia: The History and Ethnography of a Culture - Bound Syndrome

  • International Association for the Study of Traditional Asian Medicine

  • Childbirth statistics & maternal death

  • Folk medicine clippings and leaflets

  • Cross-cultural notes on female health, sex, and childbirth

  • Main Teri for Pak Long

  • Notes on gender

  • Notebook with contacts and notes on healthcare and Pak Long

  • Prints of midwives and their patients

  • 3, 2nd night Learning

  • Encyclopedia of Women and World Religion

  • Reading notes on religion

  • Field notes (partial set

  • Main Peteri: Synopses of Three Shamanistic Performances

  • Notebook with notes on childbirth and Main Teri

  • Malaria and Progress: Some Historical and Ecological Considerations

  • Anthropological Health and Healing

  • PSC CUNY application - Tradition and Change in Malay Healing

  • Annual Report - Mental Hospital, Kota Bharu

  • Report of research on anemia among pregnant Puerto Rican teenagers

  • Prayers

  • Taming the Wind of Desire - reviews

  • UC ICMR Annual Progress Report

  • Food in Human History

  • Notes on disease, treatments, bomohs and Main Peteri

  • Introduction to volume of Laderman's papers Most likely for The Life and Death of Traditional Malay Medicine

  • Notebook with notes on camera, bomohs, stories and contracts

  • Assorted notes and business cards

  • Negative transparencies

  • The Life and Death of Malay Shamanism

  • Review by Laderman of The Moral Basis of a Backward Society

  • no information

  • Notebook w/ glossary, measurements of babies, and notes on Main Teri and conversations with bomohs

  • Women as Healers

  • Pakcik Su

  • Survey of households regarding health care services, attitudes, and practices

  • Survey of childbirth, childcare, and postpartum practices and beliefs, 1 of 3

  • Bibliography & notes on SE Asian refugees

  • Main Teri - First Night

  • Sexual Egalitarianism among the: !Kung (Bushman), Mbuti (African pygmies, and Bayek pygmies)

  • NEH - Annotated Translated of Main Peteri, Malay Shamanistic Performances

Pages

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[Munah conversation with Gong Pauh bomoh]
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