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Professor Rita Astuti

Professor Rita Astuti

Professor of Social Anthropology

Department of Anthropology

Languages
English, Italian
Key Expertise
Madagascar

About me

Rita Astuti is an expert of the anthropology of Madagascar. Her writings, based on extensive fieldwork conducted since the late 80s, have been about kinship, personhood, gender, group identity and belief. After spending a significant amount of time working alongside cognitive and developmental psychologists (at NYU and Harvard), she started to combine experimental methods with more traditional ethnographic approaches. This way of working has transformed the analysis of her ethnographic material, leading her to challenge some well-established anthropological tenets, e.g., about kinship, and to generate new insights about processes of cultural learning.

In her most recent field trips, she has been investigating how the fishing community she has been studying over the past three decades is responding to the depletion of fish stock in the local waters, chiefly through a seasonal migration along the northern coast of Madagascar.

Rita Astuti is the author of  (CUP, 1995) and, with developmental psychologists Susan Carey and Gregg Solomon, of  (Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 2004). You can find some of her articles below, in the list of selected publications. You can also listen to an account of her thirty years of research in Madagascar in , recorded in 2020 during the COVID lockdown.

Expertise Details

cognitive anthropology; cognitive psychology; cross-cultural studies; developmental psychology; gender; identity; kinship

Selected publications

2022 Psychological essentialism. An anchoring for anthropological comparison. In D. N. Gellner &  D. P. Martinez (Eds.), Recreating Anthropology. Sociality, matter, and the imagination, Oxford & New York: Routledge, pp 195-209. 

2017 On keeping up the tension between fieldwork and ethnography, HAU, Vol 7, No1, pp. 9-14. 

2017 Taking people seriously, HAU, Vol 7, No 1, pp. 105–122.

2015. . Anthropology of this century, 13. 

2015. (co-editor with Denis Regnier). Special Issue: The cognitive challenge. Social Anthropology 23.

2015. (with M. Bloch) . Frontiers in Psychology, 6. 136. ISSN 1664-1078

2013. (with M. Bloch) Are ancestors dead? In: Boody, J. & Lambek, M. (Eds.) Companion to the Anthropology of Religion. Wiley-Blackwell, London, pp. 103-17

2012  Anthropology of This Century, 3.

2012. (with M. Bloch). . Topics in Cognitive Science, 4 (3). 453-461.

2011. . In V. Talwar, P.L. Harris & M. Schleifer (Eds.), Children's understanding of death: From biological to supernatural conceptions, New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1-18.

2010. (with M. Bloch). . Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 33 (2-3). 83-84.

2009. Revealing and obscuring Rivers’s natural pedigrees: Biological inheritance and kinship in Madagascar. In J. Leach & S. Bamford (Eds.) Kinship and Beyond: the genealogical model reconsidered, Berghahn, pp. 214-236. 

2008. (with P.L. Harris) , Cognitive Science, 32, 1, pp. 1-29.

2007. . Terrain, 48, pp. 101-12.

2007. . In Culture and Society: Some Viewpoints of Cognitive Scientists, F. Clement and L. Kaufmann (Eds.). Special issue of Intellectica. Revue de l'Association pour la Recherche Cognitive, 46-47, pp. 173-189.

2007. What happens after death? In Questions of Anthropology, Rita Astuti, Jonathan Parry & Charles Stafford (eds.), London School of Economics Monographs, Oxford: Berg, pp. 227-247.

2007. Ancestors and the afterlife. In Religion, anthropology, and cognitive science, Harvey Whitehouse and James Laidlaw (eds). Chapel Hill: Carolina Academic, pp. 161-178.

2004. (with G.E.A. Solomon and S. Carey) . Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, no.277, vol. 69, no.3

2001. . (The 2000 Malinowski Memorial Lecture) Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 7, pp. 429-447.

2000. , Terrain, 34, pp. 89-105.

2000.  In: Carsten, Janet, (ed.) Cultures of Relatedness : New Approaches to the Study of Kinship. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 90-103.

1998. . In Bodies and persons: Comparative perspectives from Africa and Melanesia, Michael Lambek and Andrew Strathern (eds). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 29-52.

1995. . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.