Anthropology at Berkeley
 

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Anthropology Faculty

Nelson H. H. Graburn
Social Cultural Anthropology
Curator of North American Ethnology,
Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology
Thomas Garden Barnes Endowed Chair, Canadian Studies Program

307 Kroeber Hall
510.642.2120

E-mail: graburn@berkeley.edu

Office Hours:
M 1:30-3
Tu 10-11:30


Prof. Graburn and grandson, with graduate student Ivan Irenas, in Lisbon, 2003.

Research Interests

I was educated in Natural Sciences and Anthropology at Cambridge, McGill and University of Chicago. I have carried out ethnographic research with the Inuit (and Naskapi) of Canada (and Alaska and Greenland) since 1959, and in Japan (and East and Southeast Asia) since 1974. I have taught at Berkeley since 1964, with visiting appointments at the National Museum of Civilization, Ottawa, Le Centre des Hautes Etudes Touristiques, Aix-en-Provence, the National Museum of Ethnology (Minpaku) in Osaka, and the Research Center for Korean Studies, Kyushu National University, Fukuoka. I teach courses on Tourism, Japan, and Tourism, Art and Modernity and I am an active member of the Townsend Center supported Tourism Studies Working Group. My recent research has focused on the study of art, tourism, museums, and the expression and representation of identity. I am now working on Contemporary Tourism in Asia (Japan and China) . I am also working with the Canadian Inuit cultural organization, Avatak, in Nouveau Quebec, and with Inuit institutions in Iqaluit, Nunavut, on aspects of cultural preservation and autonomy, and I am continuing my research on contemporary Inuit arts including "urban Inuit arts."



Representative Publications
 
2007 (March) Multiculturalism in the New Japan, London, NY: Berghahn (co-edited with John Ertl and Kenji Tierney)

2006 “Culture as Narrative: Who is telling the Inuit Story?” pp. 139-154 in Critical Inuit Studies. Pam Stern and Lisa Stevenson eds. Lincoln: U. of Nebraska Press.


2005   "From Aesthetics to Prosthetics and Back: Materials, Performance and   Consumers in Canadian Inuit Sculptural Arts; or, Alfred Gell in the Canadian Arctic."     Pp. 47-62 in Les cultures à l'oeuvre- Rencontres en art  Michèle Coquet, Brigitte Derlon et Monique Jeudy-Ballini (eds.). Paris: Biro Editeur


2004. "The Invention of Authentic Inuit Art." In Beyond Art/Artifact/Tourist Art: Social Agency and the Cultural Value(s) of the Aestheticized Object. Nelson Graburn and Aaron Glass eds. Special issue of Material Culture, 9(2):141-59.

2002. "The Ethnographic Tourist." Pp. 19-39 in The Tourist as a Metaphor of the Social World. Graham Dann ed. Wallingford: CAB International.

2000. "Learning to Consume: What is Heritage and When is it Traditional?" Pp. 68-89 in Consuming Tradition, Manufacturing Heritage. Nezar AlSayyad (ed). Routledge.

1999. "Saranip and Tenki: The Basketry of the Ainu, in relation to the baskets of Siberia and Alaska." Pp. 301-8 in Ainu: Spirit of a Northern People. W. Fitzhugh and C. Dubreuil, eds.  Washington DC: Smithsonian (with Molly Lee).

1998.  "Work and Play in the Japanese Countryside." Pp. 195-212 in The Culture of Japan as Seen Through Its Leisure. S. Linhart and S. Freusteuck, eds. New York: SUNY Press.



No Courses for Fall 2007






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