WORK
Composing a Life
Bateson's 1989 study of five women — herself included — whose
interrupted careers revealed composition rather than planning as the fundamental practice of a life.
Composing a Life (1989) is Mary Catherine Bateson's foundational work — an anthropological study of five women whose professional trajectories did not unfold according to linear plans. Each had changed fields, abandoned specializations, interrupted her career for caregiving or relocation, and composed a new professional life from whatever materials the disruption left behind. By the metric of the planned career — a straight line from training to mastery to eminence — these women had failed repeatedly. Bateson's radical
reframing argued they had done something more
interesting: they had composed. The book introduced the jazz metaphor of improvisation over predetermined score, the distinction
between plan and practice, and the observation that discontinuity is not the enemy of coherent identity but often its condition.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book emerged from Bateson's own biographical position. Her career had been repeatedly interrupted — by her husband's academic moves, by childbearing, by the political upheavals at Amherst College where she had been appointed dean and then