Bilinda Straight is a Cultural Anthropologist (Ph.D in
Anthropology and Graduate Certificate in Women's Studies, 1997, University of
Michigan; M.A. in Anthropology, 1990, University of Michigan; B.A. in Women's
Studies and English Literature, summa cum laude, 1987, Lake Erie College).
She works with Samburu pastoralists in northern Kenya on issues relating to
consciousness, gender, death, sexuality, inter-ethnic violence, and material
culture. Her first book, Miracles and Extraordinary Experience in Northern
Kenya (In Press, University of Pennsylvania Press), critically engages the
phenomenological approach within anthropology and anthropology's "sensuous
turn" through Samburu miracles and extraordinary experiences. Her second
book (in progress), Sexy Ornaments: Histories of Sensuous Encounter in Northern
Kenya (working title) examines visual and textual representations and experiential
understandings of Samburu adornment and sexuality from 1884 to the present.
Her work in progress on ethnic violence in northern Kenya (based on primary
research generously funded by National Science Foundation Grant #0413431) merges
a micropolitical approach focused on the gendered dimensions of violence as
a cultural form with a critical analysis that both emphasizes and challenges
the explanatory power of 'culture' in shaping ethnic conflict.
1001 Moore Hall
Departments of Anthropology, and Gender & Women's
Studies
Western Michigan University (email:
Bilinda.Straight@wmich.edu)
Kalamazoo, MI 49008 (tel: 269-387-0409)
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