Professor of Cultural Anthropology

Institutional Affiliation

Colorado State University
Cultural Anthropology

Education

Ph.D., M.A.,聽University of California San Diego
B.S.,聽Vanderbilt University

Regional and Thematic Interests

South Asia
Health

Profile

I am a critical psychiatric anthropologist, who investigates the social foundations of mental well-being and the bio-psycho-cultural therapeutics of ritual and play. I am especially interested to understand how human health and healing processes function in natural and (technologically) built environments experiencing dramatic change and high risk and uncertainty. My research suggests that local therapies and sources of health resilience are especially important in such contexts and as such should be incorporated more fully into the global mental health agenda.

I direct the Ethnographic Research and Teaching Lab (ERTL), which gets students involved in my ongoing collaborative research. In my lab, I merge research and teaching in ways that aim to move the field of cultural anthropology beyond the 鈥渓one ethnographer鈥 approach (see my recent Nov. 2016 contribution to the聽Annals of Anthropological Practice).

Some of my recent research has focused on spiritual systems of health and healing in India, for example, investigating how Hindu tribal celebrations provide sources of health resilience for central Indian conservation refugees (see my forthcoming April 2017 article in聽Current Anthropology). Combining stress biomarkers, epidemiological surveys, and more conventional ethnography, this research was funded by the National Science Foundation: 2011-14. 鈥淓nvironmental Displacement and Human Resilience: New Explanations Using Data from Central India鈥 (NSF Grant #: BCS-1062787).

Full texts of my publications can be found on these two sites (often in pre-publication form; visit journal sites for post-publication versions):