David Francis Pocock Explained

David Francis Pocock (3 September 1928 – 25 November 2007) was a British anthropologist whose main field of study was the people and diaspora of the Indian state of Gujarat, and in particular the Patidar community of that state.

David Pocock was born on 3 September 1928 in London. After early education at Highbury School, he attended Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he studied English Literature under F. R. Leavis. During the 1950s, he moved to the University of Oxford to take a PhD in anthropology under the guidance of Edward Evans-Pritchard. It was at this time that he began to translate the works of Emile Durkheim and he also conducted fieldwork in Gujarat, as well as among the Indian diaspora in East Africa and London.[1] [2]

Pocock moved to a post as reader at the University of Sussex in 1966, having become disenchanted with life in Oxford. Sussex provided a more relaxed social environment and was at the time a centre of challenging intellectual ideas. The Guardian describes how, at Sussex, "He soon developed a wide range of friendships and famously celebrated his 40th birthday with a legendary "black party", draping the house in crepe and serving only black velvet and caviar, both in copious quantities."

A personal chair was awarded to Pocock by Sussex in 1977.[3] While there, he was influential in the foundation of the School of African and Asian Studies and also in rescuing the archives of Mass Observation. He was an inspirational teacher but became tired of changes occurring in the university system and retired early, in 1987. Although he then gave up formal study, he remained an intellectually rigorous and curious person. In particular, The Guardian notes, "... forgoing his long and intense association with Roman Catholicism, he looked to a deeper involvement in the mystery of human consciousness through his investigations of Buddhism". He also became a prison visitor.

Pocock died on 25 November 2007. He had been awarded the Rivers Memorial Medal by the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland in 1974.[4]

Works

Louis Dumont was among the influential social anthropologists that Pocock met while at Oxford. As well as taking over Dumont's lectureship in Indian sociology while at that university, Pocock joined with Dumont to found Contributions to Indian Sociology, an academic journal. in 1957. The pair worked together on this for five years.

Much of his work remains unpublished, despite being influential and despite the existence of a lengthy bibliography.[5] Among his published writings were:

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Obituary: David Pocock:Anthropologist whose research embraced India and east Africa . Paul . Yates . Jock . Stirrat . The Guardian . London & Manchester . 24 January 2008 . 8 January 2013.
  2. Web site: David Pocock . SOAS University of London . 8 January 2013.
  3. The point of death: A comparative anthropological approach . David F. . Pocock . 10.1177/006996671004400306 . Contributions to Indian Sociology . October 2010 . 44 . 3 . 361–382 . 141486696 .
  4. Web site: Rivers Memorial Medal Prior Recipients . Royal Anthropological Institute . 8 January 2013.
  5. A bibliography of the writings of David F. Pocock . David F. . Pocock . Contributions to Indian Sociology . 2010 . 44 . 3 . 383–388 . 10.1177/006996671004400307 . 143807584 .