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Bruce Kapferer (born 1940 in
Sydney Sydney ( ) is the capital city of the state of New South Wales, and the most populous city in both Australia and Oceania. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Sydney Harbour and extends about towards the Blue Mountain ...
) is an Australian anthropologist. He is best known for his work on Sri Lanka, Australia and Zambia. He has been at the forefront of anthropological debate for over three decades. He was honoured with Huxley Prize in 2011 by the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain.


Biography

Kapferer studied at the University of Sydney and later for the Ph.D. at the University of Manchester. He became part of the famous Manchester School of Anthropology working with Max Gluckman, Victor Turner, Bill Epstein, Elizabeth Colson and J.Clyde Mitchell. His early fieldwork was in Zambia where he researched among the Bisa of Lake Bangweulu and among mine and commercial workers in the town of Kabwe. His work from Zambia contributed to an analytical tradition of exchange theory but with a structuralist orientation. Working under Clyde Mitchell, he became an early pioneer of social network analysis. But later, following extensive fieldwork in Sri Lanka, he shifted his focus to ritual demonstrating the importance of the phenomenology of aesthetics to the analysis of ritual performance. He has since extended this interest to the interpretation of nationalism and its violence. His interest on nationalism was slowly linked then to research on the transformations of state structures that reproduce inequality, poverty, and violence. Much of Kapferer’s theoretical interventions comes from his articles mostly appeared in Social Analysis, the journal he founded in 1976 in collaboration with Kingsley Garbett and Michael Roberts. Some of the most noted articles are The Star Wars (2000), Retreat of the Social (2004), Anthropology And the Dialectic of Enlightenment (2007), and In the Event (2010). He was one of the editors of Anthropological Theory (until 2014) and remains on the Board. Kapferer established two anthropology departments in Australia (at the University of Adelaide and at James Cook University). He was also instrumental in the foundation of the Cairns Institute. Kapferer has also held professorial posts in anthropology at University College London (where he is now an Honorary Professorial Fellow) and at the University of Bergen, where he is currently Emeritus and the Director of ‘Egalitarianism’ research program.


Selected works

* ''A Celebration of Demons'', Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Second Edition 1991 (Berg Publishers). 1983 * ''Legends of people and Myths of State'', Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988. * ''The Feast of The Sorcerer'', Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997. * ''2001 and Counting: Kubrick, Nietzsche, and anthropology''. Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2014 * ''Transaction and Meaning in an African Factory'', Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1972.


References


Bruce Kapferer - An interview.
''Antropolog Nytt''. 3/2000.

AnthroBase.


External links




Bruce Kapferer at "Pioneers of Qualitative Research" from the Economic and Social Data Service
University of Adelaide faculty Anthropologists of religion Social anthropologists Australian anthropologists University of Sydney alumni University of Bergen faculty University of Gothenburg faculty 1940 births Living people Australian expatriates in the United Kingdom Australian expatriates in Zambia Australian expatriates in Sweden Australian expatriates in Norway James Cook University faculty Academics of University College London {{reli-anthropologist-stub