Hillary K. Crane
Hillary K. Crane
Associate Professor of Anthropology; Co-Coordinator, Linguistics; Asian Studies
Walker Hall 218
Hillary Crane joined the ÃÛѨÊÓƵ faculty in 2007. She teaches courses in cultural anthropology, linguistics, medical anthropology, anthropology of the body, religion, gender, sexuality and East Asia. Her research examines areas where religion and medicine conflict or overlap and the gender of Taiwanese Buddhist nuns. She also researches the complexities of living with celiac disease in the U.S. and hires students every summer to collaborate on that project.
Education
- B.A., History, Seattle University
- M.A., Anthropology, Brown University
- Ph.D., Anthropology, Brown University
Publications:
Professor Crane recently co-edited a collection on the subject of conversion pressures on anthropologists who research religious communities: : Conversion, Resistance, and Other Challenges to Objectivity in Religious Ethnography, with Deana L. Weibel. Some of her publications are.