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Richard Shweder's biography statement.

Richard A. Shweder is a cultural anthropologist and Professor of Human Development at the University of Chicago.

He received his Ph.D. degree in social anthropology in the Department of Social Relations at Harvard University in 1972, taught a year at the University of Nairobi in Kenya and has been at the University of Chicago ever since.

He is author of Thinking Through Cultures: Expeditions in Cultural Psychology and editor or co-editor of several books in the areas cultural psychology, psychological anthropology and comparative human development, including Culture Theory: Essays on Mind, Self and Emotion, Cultural Psychology: Essays on Comparative Human Development, Metatheory in Social Science: Pluralisms and Subjectivities, Ethnography and Human Development: Meaning and Context in Social Inquiry, and Welcome to Middle Age! (And Other Cultural Fictions).

A collection of his recent essays is in preparation entitled Why Do Men Barbecue?: And Other Recipes for Cultural Psychology. Professor Shweder has been a recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and the recipient of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Socio-Psychological Prize for his essay "Does the Concept of the Person Vary Cross-Culturally?.

He has twice been a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Palo Alto, where he has co-chaired a special project on "Culture, Mind and Biology." He has been a Visiting Scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has been a member of the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Successful Midlife Development (MICMAC). He has served as President of the Society for Psychological Anthropology and is currently co-chairing a joint Social Science Research Council/Russell Sage Foundation Working Group on "Ethnic Customs, Assimilation and American Law", which is concerned with the issue of the "Free exercise of culture: How Free Is It? How Free Ought It To Be?"

For the past thirty years Professor Shweder has been conducting research in cultural psychology on moral reasoning, emotional functioning, gender roles, explanations of illness, causal ontologies of suffering and the moral foundations of family life practices in the Hindu temple town of Bhubaneswar on the East Coast of India.

During the 1999-2000 academic year he was a Fellow at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (The Institute for Advanced Study in Berlin) where he co-edited an issue of the journal Daedalus (Autumn 2000) entitled The End of Tolerance: Engaging Cultural Differences.

His recent research examines the scopes and limits of pluralism in Western liberal democracies. He examines the norm conflicts that arise when people migrate from Africa, Asia and Latin America to countries in the "North". They bring with them culturally endorsed practices (e.g., arranged marriage, animal sacrifice, circumcision of both girls and boys, ideas about parental authority) that mainstream populations in the United States or Western Europe sometimes find aberrant and disturbing. How much accommodation to cultural diversity occurs and ought to occur under such circumstances?

 

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