Kenelm Burridge

Kenelm Oswald Lancelot Burridge (* 1922 in Malta) is an anthropologist.

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Biography

Kenelm Burridge was born in 1922 in Malta. After a childhood in Lucknow, India, he attended school in Great Britain. Burridge enlisted in the Royal Navy in 1939, serving throughout the Second World War. Although his ship, the HMS Splendid, was sunk off Naples, Italy in 1943 and he was captured, Burridge escaped, returned to naval service, and retired as a lieutenant three years later.

He entered Exeter College, Oxford University in 1946, receiving a B.A. in 1948 in social anthropology, followed by a B.Litt. in 1950 and an M.A. in 1952 in anthropology. In 1954 he received his Ph.D. in anthropology from the Australian National University, Canberra, his dissertation entitled Social Control in Tangu.

As his scholarly books and papers attest, Burridge has conducted fieldwork in Papua New Guinea, Malaya (where he was a research fellow at the University of Malaya), Australia, New Hebrides, and India. His main interests during his scholarly career have been the ethnography of Oceania, and Malaya; religion; chiliasms; social and symbolic organization; anthropological history and theory; myth; museology; and missionaries and missiology. Many of his studies have looked specifically at millenarianism and cargo cults. As John Barker writes in the Association for Social Anthropology in Oceania's 1991 Newsletter, Burridge's "most ambitious book, Someone, No One, (1979b), combines anthropology, history, philosophy and theology in a nuanced understanding of the dynamics of being an individual."[1]

After teaching at Baghdad University and Oxford University, he served as a professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia from 1968 until retiring and assuming emeritus status in 1987. Burridge has also served as visiting lecturer or professor at the University of Western Australia, Princeton University, and International Christian University in Tokyo.

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