Robert Ezra Park (February 14 1864–February 7 1944) was an American urban sociologist, one of the main founders of the original Chicago School of sociology.
After being a journalist in various US towns 1887-1898, he then studied Psychology and Philosophy for an MA at Harvard 1898-9, being taught by another prominent pragmatist philosopher, William James. After graduation, he went to Germany, studying in Berlin, Strasbourg and Heidelberg between 1899 and 1903, before returning to the USA. He studied philosophy and sociology in 1899-1900 with Georg Simmel at Berlin, spent a semester in Strasbourg 1900, and took his PhD in Psychology and Philosophy in 1903 at Heidelberg under Wilhelm Windelband (1848-1915); Dissertation: Masse und Publikum. Eine methodologische und soziologische Untersuchung. He returned to the USA in 1903, briefly becoming an assistant in philosophy at Harvard 1904-5.
Park taught at Harvard, until Booker T. Washington invited him to the Tuskegee Institute to work on racial issues in the southern U.S. He joined the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago in 1914, staying there until his retirement in 1936. He continued teaching until his death, however, at Fisk University. Park died in Nashville, Tennessee at the age of seventy-nine.
"The marginal man...is one whom fate has condemned to live in two societies and in two, not merely different but antagonistic cultures....his mind is the crucible in which two different and refractory cultures may be said to melt and, either wholly or in part, fuse." E. Park, 1937
During his lifetime Park became a well-known figure both within and outside the academic world. At various times from 1925 he was president of the American Sociological Association and of the Chicago Urban League, and was a member of the Social Science Research Council.
"Go and sit in the lounges of luxury hotels and on the doorsteps of the flophouses; sit on the Gold Coast settees and on the slum shakedowns; sit in the Orchestra Hall and in the Star and Garter Burlesque. In short go and get the seat of your pants dirty in real research." Park, 1927
During Park's time at the University of Chicago, its sociology department began to use the city that surrounded it as a sort of research laboratory. His work – together with that of his Chicago colleagues, such as Ernest Burgess, Homer Hoyt, and Louis Wirth – developed into an approach to urban sociology that became known as the Chicago School: "I have been mainly an explorer in three fields: Collective Behavior; Human Ecology; and Race Relations." *
An appreciation of Park at Brock University
An appreciation of his work in Urban social ecology by Nina Brown
An appreciation of Park at the American Sociological Association
An appreciation of Park at Dead Sociologists Index
1864 births | 1944 deaths | American sociologists | University of Chicago faculty
Robert Ezra Park | Robert E. Park | Robert Park | Robert Park
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