last updated: Jan. 24th 2004

 

 

Editor

Laurie Kain Hart is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Department of Anthropology at Haverford College in Haverford, Pennsylvania. She holds a Master of Architecture from the University of California at Berkeley and a PhD in anthropology from Harvard University. She has done fieldwork in Greece, and has written on local religious practice, on ethnic politics and history, and on architecture. Her most recent research is on population displacement and resettlement at the northwest borders of Greece and on the deconstruction of pluralist senses of place in post-war Bosnia-Herzegovina.".

Publications include:

Time, Religion and Social Experience in Rural Greece. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 1992.

"Culture, civilization, and demarcation at the north-west borders of
Greece." American Ethnologist, (1999) 26(1):196-220.

"How to do things with things: architecture and ritual in Northern
Greece." In press; in: Ritual in Greece: Interdisciplinary
Perspectives. Eds. D. Yatromanolakis and P. Roilos, Harvard
University Press.

"The interest of conflict." In press; in: Christina Vlachoutsikou
in cooperation with Laurie Kain Hart (eds), When Women have
Differences-Oppositions and Conflicts between Women in Contemporary
Greece, Athens: Medousa-Sellas.

"Afterword." In press; in Stephan Feuchtwang, ed. Making Place in
China. London: University of London Press.

"Reconstruction, Pluralism and Syncretism in Post-war
Bosnia-Herzegovina." In preparation; with Aida Premilovac.


 


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