词条 | Robert F. Murphy (anthropologist) |
释义 |
Robert Francis Murphy (March 3, 1924 – October 8, 1990) was an American anthropologist and professor of anthropology at Columbia University[1] in New York City, from the early 1960s to 1990. His field work included studies of the Munduruku (Mundurucu) people of the Amazon and the Tuareg people of the Sahara. Family, education, careerMurphy was a third generation descendant of Irish immigrants and grew up in Far Rockaway, Queens. His grandmother worked in a textile mill in New Hampshire, and his mother struggled to raise five young children with a mostly absent father in a "lace-curtain Irish" neighborhood of Queens; she suffered from breast cancer until she died when Bob was 14. He enlisted in the United States Navy during World War II, serving as a private. He used the G.I. Bill to attend Columbia College as an undergraduate. Murphy went on to earn his Master of Arts and Ph.D. in anthropology at Columbia University. He met his wife Yolanda in a physical anthropology course in graduate school, and they were married in St. Paul's Chapel at Columbia University. In 1952 the Murphys set out to do fieldwork for a year among the Munduruku of the Amazon Rainforest in Brazil, where they studied, among other things, the dynamics of a patrilineal society with matrilocal residence patterns. Bob taught at the University of California, Berkeley for several years before taking a professorship at Columbia. In the early 1960s, Bob and Yolanda, with their two small children Robert and Pamela in tow, trekked to the Sahara to undertake a second fieldwork among the Tuareg of Niger, where Bob, who was fond of paradoxes, was able to study a matrilineal society with patrilocal residence patterns. Murphy died of heart failure on October 8, 1990, at his home in Leonia, New Jersey. He was survived by his wife Yolanda and their two children.[2] Scholarly contributions to anthropologyA student of Julian Steward's cultural ecology approach in his early years, Murphy was an eclectic thinker who engaged Marx, Freud, Hegel, Simmel, and Schutz, and who incorporated ideas from diverse areas of anthropology theory — materialist, structuralist, and symbolic. Murphy wrote numerous articles and books, including:
DisabilityIn 1974, Murphy experienced a tragic turn of events, as he began to lose motor control to his lower extremities. He was diagnosed as having a benign but slow-growing tumor of the spinal cord that would unrelentingly lead to impairment of his central nervous system and greater loss of bodily functions over the next 16 years of his life; within two years, by 1976, he was quadriplegic and used a wheelchair full-time. Murphy had the "rage to live", and began to edit his popular lectures on cultural anthropology for a new textbook, Overture to Social Anthropology (1979), later revised into second (1986) and third (1989) editions before he died. Murphy dramatically transformed his scholarly efforts into an anthropological study of paraplegia, a major project funded by the National Science Foundation, which he wrote about in his ethnography of "the damaged self", The Body Silent: The Different World of the Disabled (1987, 1990, 2001), which won the Columbia University Lionel Trilling Award.[5] Teaching styleMurphy was a charismatic and extraordinarily popular teacher among the students at Columbia. His wry sense of humor and appreciation for irony caught the imaginations of thousands of Columbia undergraduates, and he regularly taught large auditorium-sized classes, even when his condition forced him to use a motorized wheelchair and speak through a microphone. Murphy won teaching awards and numerous academic awards, and was a Fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in 1968.[6] Other publicationsMurphy, Robert F.
American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 83, No. 3 (Sep., 1981), pp. 714–717
Murphy, Robert, and Yolanda Murphy
References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/anthropology/about/main/one/index.html|title=Home - Department of Anthropology|publisher=}} 2. ^Narvaez, Alfonso A. [https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE7DD113CF932A25753C1A966958260 "Robert F. Murphy, 66, Professor Of Anthropology and an Author"], The New York Times, October 11, 1990. Accessed March 31, 2011. "Robert Francis Murphy, a professor of anthropology at Columbia University, died on Monday at his home in Leonia, N.J." 3. ^http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/bookinfo/4275.html{{dead link|date=April 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} 4. ^1 {{cite web |url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023113/0231132328.HTM |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2006-12-21 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060114205241/http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023113/0231132328.HTM |archivedate=2006-01-14 |df= }} 5. ^http://www2.wwnorton.com/catalog/spring01/032042.htm 6. ^http://www.gf.org/68fellow.html External links
8 : 1924 births|1990 deaths|American anthropologists|American people of Irish descent|Columbia University alumni|Columbia University faculty|People from Far Rockaway, Queens|People from Leonia, New Jersey |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。