Edith Turner (anthropologist)


Edith Turner was an English-American anthropologist, poet, and post-secondary educator. In addition to collaborating with her husband, Victor Witter Turner, on a number of early socio-cultural research projects concerning healing, ritual and communitas, she continued to develop these topics following his death in 1983, especially communitas. Edith Turner contributed to the study of humanistic anthropology and was a dedicated social activist her entire life.

Early life

Edith Lucy Brocklesby Davis was born in Ely, England, on June 17, 1921, to Reverend Dr. George Brocklesby Davis and his wife Lucy Gertrude Davis. She attended the Perse School for Girls, Cambridge, from 1933 to 1936 for her secondary education. She earned her bachelor's degree in 1938 from Alde House Domestic Science College.
Davis met her husband Victor Turner during World War II, while working as a "land girl" in the Women's Land Army. He was serving as a noncombatant. They were married on January 30, 1943, and had a total of five children together. They include scientist Robert Turner, poet Frederick Turner, and Rory Turner, an anthropology professor at Goucher College.

Move to the United States

In the 1950s she and her family moved to the United States, where her husband had a position at the University of Chicago.
As Edith Turner, she completed her master's degree in literature 1980 through the University of Virginia. Her master's degree was titled "The Mysterious Duke: Shakespeare in the Light of Liminality."
In addition, she studied at Cape Town University, Princeton University, and Smith College.

Academic Life

In 1984, Edith Turner was appointed as a lecturer in anthropology at the University of Virginia. To this day, she has some of the most widely spanding ethnographic fieldwork across the globe including, "the Ndembu of Zambia, the Bagisu of Uganda, pilgrimage sites in Mexico, and pilgrimages in Ireland, she also studied shrines in India and Sri Lanka, Brazilian carnival and Afro-Brazilian cults, Israeli rituals, Japanese ritual and theater, Yaqui ritual, Israel pilgrimages, African American healing churches, Civil War reenactments, Korean shamanism, Inupiat festivals, suburban American rituals, ritual of the Saami of Kola Peninsula in Russia, commemorations of the 150th anniversary of the potato famine in Ireland, and Christian groups in the United States ".

Legacy

Edith Turner died on June 18, 2016. She has an award named after her at the University of Virginia. The Edie Turner Humanistic Anthropology Award acknowledges students at the University of Virginia whose teaching, activism, and writing recognize the richness of human experience.

Selected works