美国加州大学伯克利分校 荣誉教授
Professor Nelson H.H. Graburn has published over 300 articles, chapters and book reviews, in more than seven languages, covering the topics: Kinship, social structure and ethnographic methods; Canada, Japan, Ainu, tourism, China, minority nationalities, identity and cultural conservation; Inuit, Circumpolar Peoples; Visual anthropology, art and social change; Heritage, museums, material culture, symbols and nationalism. Local and regional histories of Asian Anthropology.
Professor Graburn t
aught at Berkeley since 1964, with visiting appointments at the National Museum of Civilization, Ottawa; Le Centre des Hautes Etudes Touristiques, Aix-en-Provence; the National Museum of Ethnology (Minpaku) in Osaka; the Research Center for Korean Studies, U. of Kyushu, Fukuoka; Dept. of Anthropology, U. Rio Grande del Sol, Porto Alegre, Brazil; Senior Professor, International Institute for Culture, Tourism and Development, London Metropolitan University;Beijing International Studies University; Beijing Central Nationalities University; Ningbo University, Yunnan National U., Kunming, and many others. My recent research has focused on the study of art, tourism, museums, heritage and the expression and representation of identity. I have been working on Contemporary Domestic Tourism and Heritage in East Asia, and on Multiculturalism in Japan. I continues to work with the Inuit cultural organization, Avataq (Nunavik) and the Nunavut Research Institute, on aspects of cultural preservation and historical recovery, contemporary Inuit arts including urban Inuit artists, and on cultural tourism and self-governance.