Between the 1920s and the 1940s, cultural anthropology in the United States-and Boasian anthropology in particular-appeared as a collaborative field connected to a social milieu of writers, musicians, filmmakers, dancers, and scholars from a variety of disciplines. My article focuses on this broad network of people who worked on projects, discussed broader social questions, and developed methodological concepts. This collaborative field stemmed from a cultural milieu of intellectuals and artists who used the interdisciplinary space to reflect upon their own work and the society they lived in. I employ and widen Norbert Elias's concept of figuration to focus on reciprocal relationships and exchange in order to understand the dynamic networks...