Linda Connor (anthropologist) explained

Linda Helen Connor (born 1950 in Sydney) is an Australian anthropologist. She is Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at the University of Sydney.

Background and career

Connor graduated from the University of Sydney with a Bachelor of Arts (Honours in Anthropology) in 1974 and a PhD in Anthropology in 1982. She is an elected Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia.[1] From 2009-2018 she was Chair of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Sydney.[2] She served two years as President of the Australian Anthropological Society from 2009–2010 and Vice President of the National Tertiary Education Union Sydney University Branch[3] from 2018-21. She has held positions at the University of Newcastle, the Australian Research Council, University of California, and East-West Center, Hawai’i.

Research

Connor has researched and published on religion and ritual,[4] medical anthropology,[5] development,[6] visual anthropology,[7] shamanism and healing,[8] and rural environmental change,[9] predominantly in Indonesia, India and Australia. Funding sources include the Australian Research Council, the Wenner-Gren Foundation and the Ford Foundation. In Indonesia, she studied transformations of development, economy and social life in Bali,[10] as well as processes of citizenship and decentralization in rural communities.[11] From 1978 to 1990 she collaborated with ethnographic filmmakers Patsy and Timothy Asch to produce a series of films and a film monograph based on the life and work of a Balinese healer, Jero Tapakan, and her village.[12] [13] [14] [15] In North India in the mid-1990s, she investigated questions of displacement, identity, and cultural innovation, as part of a team studying healing in diasporic Tibetan communities.[16] Since 2002 she has worked on interdisciplinary projects focused on coal-affected localities, climate change and energy transitions in the Hunter Valley and North West New South Wales Australia.[17] [18] She is currently undertaking ethnographic research on social legitimacy of renewable energy development in Upper Spencer Gulf, South Australia as part of an ARC funded cross-national team.[19]

Selected publications

Goodman, J., Connor, L., Ghosh, D., Morton, T. S., Marshall, J., Mueller, K., Menon, M., Kholi, K., Pearse, R. and Rosewarne, S. 2020. The End of the Coal Rush: A Turning Point for Global Energy and Climate Policy? Cambridge University Press.

Connor, L. 2016. Climate Change and Anthropos: Planet, People and Places. London: Routledge/Earthscan.

Marshall, J. and Connor, L. (eds.) 2016. Environmental Change and the World’s Futures: Ecologies, Ontologies and Mythologies. London: Routledge/Earthscan.

Connor, L. 2010. “Anthropogenic Climate Change and Cultural Crisis: An Anthropological Perspective.” Australian Journal of Political Economy 66:247-267.

Higginbotham, N., Albrecht, G. and Connor, L. 2001. Health Social Science: A Transdisciplinary and Complexity Perspective. Melbourne, Oxford University Press. 382pp.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Academy Fellow: Professor Linda Connor ASSA. 2020-10-05. Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. en-US.
  2. Web site: Professor Linda Connor - The University of Sydney. Sydney. The University of. sydney.edu.au.
  3. Web site: Officers - University of Sydney. www.nteu.org.au. 2019-05-06.
  4. Connor. Linda H.. 1995. The Action of the Body on Society: Washing a Corpse in Bali. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 1. 3. 537–559. 10.2307/3034574. 1359-0987. 3034574.
  5. Connor. Linda H.. 2004. Relief, risk and renewal: mixed therapy regimens in an Australian suburb. Social Science & Medicine. 59. 8. 1695–1705. 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.01.030. 15279926. 0277-9536.
  6. Mcmanus. Phil. Connor. Linda H. 2013. What's Mine Is Mine(D): Contests Over Marginalisation Of rural life in the Upper Hunter, NSW. Rural Society. 22. 2. 166–183. 10.5172/rsj.2013.22.2.166. 109486459 . 1037-1656.
  7. Connor. Linda. Asch. Patsy. 1995. Subjects, Images, Voices: Representing Gender in Ethnographic Film. Visual Anthropology Review. 11. 1. 5–18. 10.1525/var.1995.11.1.5.
  8. Connor. Linda H.. 1995. Acquiring invisible strength: A Balinese discourse of harm and well‐being. Indonesia Circle. School of Oriental & African Studies. Newsletter. 23. 66. 124–153. 10.1080/03062849508729843. 0306-2848.
  9. Connor. Linda. Higginbotham. Nick. Freeman. Sonia. Albrecht. Glenn. 2008. Watercourses and Discourses: Coalmining in the Upper Hunter Valley, New South Wales. Oceania. 78. 1. 76–90. 10.1002/j.1834-4461.2008.tb00029.x. 0029-8077. 1959.13/40190. free.
  10. Book: Rubinstein. R. Connor. L. 1999. Staying Local in the Global Village: Bali in the Twentieth Century. j.ctt6wr0k5. University of Hawaii Press. Honolulu. 9780824821173.
  11. Connor. L. Vickers. A. 2003. Crisis, citizenship, and cosmopolitanism: Living in a local and global risk society in Bali.. Indonesia. 75. 75. 153–180. 3351311.
  12. Asch, P., Asch. T., and Connor, L. 1981. Jero on Jero. 'A Balinese Trance Seance' Observed. Dist.: Documentary Educational Resources (DER), Royal Anthropological Institute and ANU (RSPAS), Canberra.
  13. Asch, P., Connor, L., and Asch. T. 1983. Jero Tapakan: Stories from the life of a Balinese healer. ANU, Canberra.
  14. Asch, P., Asch. T., and Connor, L. 1983. The Medium is the Masseuse. Dist.: DER, Royal Anthropological Institute and ANU (RSPAS), Canberra.
  15. Asch, P., Asch. T., and Connor, L. 1991. Releasing the Spirits: A Village Cremation in Bali. Dist.: DER, Royal Anthropological Institute and ANU (RSPAS), Canberra.
  16. Connor, L. and Samuel, G. (eds.) 2001. Healing Powers and Modernity: Shamanism, Science and Traditional Medicine in Asian Societies. Westport, CT: Bergin and Garvey. 283pp
  17. Connor. Linda H.. 2016. Energy futures, state planning policies and coal mine contests in rural New South Wales. Energy Policy. en. 99. 233–241. 10.1016/j.enpol.2016.05.026.
  18. Web site: Home. The Coal Rush and Beyond. en-AU.
  19. Web site: 2019. ARC Project ID: DP180101368.