Anthony Carter
Professor
Ayala Emmett
Associate Professor
Signithia Fordham
Associate Professor
Robert J. Foster
Professor and Chair
Thomas P. Gibson
Professor
Eleana Kim
Assistant Professor
Maryann McCabe
Senior Lecturer
Daniel Reichman
Assistant Professor
Anthropologists in Other Departments
Noelle C. Andrus
Assistant Professor
Nancy Chin
Assistant Professor
Mary-Therese Dombeck
Professor
Nancy Foster
Lead Anthropologist, Digital Initiatives Unit
Ewa Hauser
Associate Professor
Ernestine McHugh
Associate Professor
Bethel Powers
Professor
Administrative Assistant
Ayala Emmett
Associate Professor
Office: Lattimore 437, Telephone: (585) 275-8736
E-mail: AEMT@mail.rochester.edu
CV | Courses | Publications | Research
Professor Emmett received her B.A. from the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem Israel, in English Literature, Sociology, and Anthropology and
her M.A. and Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Rochester.
Professor Emmett's research interests include politics, gender, peace and
justice, medical anthropology and text analysis. The United States and
Israel have been her main geographic research areas. Her research in the
United States includes fieldwork at Strong Memorial Hospital focusing on
adolescent pregnancy and infant feeding patterns and among dual career
families. Her research on parenthood, work and gender was supported by the
National Institute of Mental Health. In 1990-91 and in 1993 she did
fieldwork in Israel on politics, gender and peace. She has published a
book, articles in edited volumes and journals and has edited two special
volumes.
Women in Black Peace Vigil, Jerusalem, 1990
Professor Emmett's book on Israeli politics and women's peace activism, Our Sister's Promised Land: Women, Politics and Israeli-Palestinian Coexistence, was supported by a grant from the Lucius N. Littauer Foundation and published by The University of Michigan Press in 1996. Her book was reissued in a paperback 2003 edition with a new, updated introductory chapter.
Professor Emmett's current research focuses on women and religion in America and the ways that the public square and secular ideas on gender, citizenship and justice have penetrated and affected faith communities. She is doing fieldwork on Jewish women who in their synagogues take on traditionally religious male rituals, objects and roles; this research follows her earlier fieldwork among Presbyterian women ministers. Professor Emmett has widened her scholarly, publication, and teaching interests to include creative ethnography. She was the recipient of the 2000 Humanistic Anthropology Fiction Award for her story "Going to America Under the Jacaranda Tree." The story was published in Anthropology and Humanism in the June 2001 issue. Professor Emmett is currently revising her ethnographic novel, After the Disappearance, about the shocking disappearance of a beloved and well-known Israeli journalist in the 1950s.
Professor Emmett is the founder of Seeds for College, a university affiliated and community-based foundation with the goal of helping inner city minority children to successfully graduate from high school and awards them seed money to go to college. Professor Emmett is an Associate Editor of Sex Roles. She is the 2008 Chair of the Society for Humanistic Anthropology Fiction Award.
Curriculum Vitae
1973 Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel, B.A., English Literature, Sociology, and Social Anthropology1977 University of Rochester M.A., Anthropology
1980 Ph.D., Anthropology. Dissertation: Parenthood by Choice: Transition to Parenthood Among White Middle Class Couples in Rochester, New York.
List of Current Courses
ANT 204: Ethnographic Themes
ANT 245: American Culture
List of Past Courses
ANT 103: Women in Society: A crosscultural Perspective
ANT 216: Medical Anthropology
ANT 244: Marriage, Families and Community in a Global Perspective
ANT 274: Creative Ethnography
ANT 291: Research Practicum: Doing Anthropology
ANT 292: Senior Seminar: Globlize Your Perspective
ANT 295: Home From Abroad
Books
| 1996 | Our Sisters' Promised Land: Women's Peace Politics And The Israeli Palestinian Conflict. .Michigan University Press. |
| 1994 | (With Douglas P. Fry) Cross-Cultural Perspectives Aggression in Women and Girls. Sex Roles. Special Issue, 30, Nos. 3/4. |
| 1998 | (With Ellen Kintz) Globalization and Local Cultures: Maya Women Negotiate Transformations. Sex Roles. Special Issue, 39, Nos. 3/4 |
Articles
| 1989 | "Politics, Ideology and Scholarship: Anthropology Facing Women's Studies." Urban Anthropology, 18, No 1, 113-122. |
| 1991 | "De-Mystifying the Poor and the Peasants: Women Making Reproductive Choices." Reviews in Anthropology, Vol. 18, 75-84. |
| 1992 | "Living With Medea and Thinking After Freud: Greek Drama, Gender and Concealments" Cultural Anthropology, Vol. 7, 346-373. |
| 1992 | "Rage and Grief: Collective Emotions in the Politics of Peace and the Politics of Gender in Israel" Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry , Vol. 16, 311-335. |
| 1994 | "The Cultural Construction of Gender and Aggression" Sex Roles, 30, No 314, 165-167. |
| 1998 | "Sex and Gender as Raw Political Material: Local Women Negotiate Globalization" Sex Roles, 39, Nos. 7/8, 503-513. |
| 2001 | "Going to America Under the Jacaranda Tree" Anthropology and Humanism, Vol. 26, No 1. |
Selected Research
1977-1979 |
Rochester, New York. Dual-career couples: Gender, work and family. |
1980-1981 |
Rochester, New York. Adolescent pregnancy and maternity: gender, class and race. (Rochester Adolescent Maternity Program, Strong Memorial Hospital, Division of Adolescent Medicine.) |
1983-5 |
Rochester, New York. Cultural values and biomedical knowledge: Research on infant feeding patterns (at Strong Memorial Hospital). |
1987 |
Israeli women's responses to the Hebrew Bible: Scripture, gender and politics |
1990-1993 |
Women's peace activism and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict |
1995 |
The Gender of a Calling: Women Pastors in the Presbyterian Church |
1999 |
Community and the Common Good in America |

