Robbins Burling (b. April 18, 1926 in Minneapolis, Minnesota) is an American professor of anthropology and linguistics.
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Burling received his undergraduate degree from Yale University in 1950 and his Ph.D in Anthropology from Harvard University in 1958. His teaching career began as a teaching fellow in Anthropology at Harvard University in the fall of 1953, the spring of 1954 and the spring of 1957.
Burling was an instructor at the Department of Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania from 1957-1959. He became an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Pennsylvania from 1959-1963. From 1959-1963 he was the Assistant Curator of General Ethnology at the University Museum.
From 1959-1960, Burling was a visiting lecturer, Fulbright Program, in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Rangoon, Burma. He became an Associate Professor of Anthropology and Associate of the Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies at the University of Michigan from 1966-1995. Currently, Dr. Burling is professor emeritus of Anthropology and Linguistics at the University of Michigan.
Burling specializes in language, human evolution and comprehension in communication. He has researched extensively in Bangladesh and India.
His books include Hill Farms and Padi Fields: Life in Mainland Southeast Asia, '"English in Black and White," The Passage of Power: Studies in Political Succession," and The Talking Ape: How Language Evolved.
Shortly after finishing college, Burling was married and had three children.