Karen Richman
Academic Director, Institute for Latino Studies
(PhD, University of Virginia, 1992)
230 McKenna Hall
574-631-8146
email: krichman@nd.edu
http://latinostudies.nd.edu/about/richman_bio.php
Geographic focus: Mexico, the Caribbean (Haiti), and the United States.
Thematic interests: Religion, migration, transnationalism, performance, gender, production and consumption.
Current research: Migration and religious conversion and an ethnographic biography of a Mexican immigrant woman.
Selected publications: “The Somatics of Syncretism: Tying Body and Soul in Haitian Religion,” (with Terry Rey) Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 39, 3 (2010); Migration and Vodou (New Diasporas Series of the University Press of Florida, 2005); “Innocent Imitations? Mimesis and Alterity in Haitian Vodou Art, Tourism and Anthropology,” Ethnohistory (2008); “‘Call us Vote People’: Citizenship, Migration and Transnational Politics in Haitian and Mexican Locations” in Citizenship, Political Engagement, and Belonging: Immigrants in Europe and the United States, D. Reed-Danahay and C. Brettell, eds. (Rutgers University Press, 2008); “Peasants, Migrants and the Discovery of African Traditions: Ritual and Social Change in Lowland Haiti, ” Journal of Religion in Africa (2007); and “Simplemente Maria: Naming Workers, Placing People and the Production of Hospitality,” Review of International American Studies (2007).
Selected videos:
http://video.nd.edu/143-immigration-faculty-stories 10/08/2007