Edmund Leach

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Edmund Leach, Self-portrait (Leach, China, c.1934).

Sir Edmund Ronald Leach (7 November 1910 – 6 January 1989) was a British social anthropologist.

Biography

Edmund Ronald Leach was born on 7 November 1910 at Sidmouth. He attended Marlborough College, and won an Exhibition to Clare College, Cambridge, matriculating in 1929. He studied mathematics for the first year, then engineering, achieving a First in 1932.

After Cambridge, Leach worked initially as a commercial assistant for Butterfield and Swire in Shanghai, spending his holidays travelling around the country. He undertook anthropological field research in Botel Tobago, (Orchid Island, Taiwan) in 1938, before returning to England as a graduate student at the London School of Economics, where he studied under Malinowski. This was followed by further research in Kurdistan. From 1939-45 Leach was an army officer stationed in Burma, where he carried out more field work. He married Celia Joyce Buckmaster in 1940, and they had a daughter, Louisa.

After the war Leach returned to LSE to complete his PhD, and, after a brief spell in Borneo, became a lecturer, later a Reader, in Social Anthropology. In 1953 he moved to the Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology at Cambridge University as a lecturer, then Reader, and was given his own chair in 1972. Leach's final piece of field work was undertaken in 1954-5 in Ceylon, where he studied the village of Pul Eliya.

Leach was made a Fellow of King's College in 1960 and was elected Provost in 1966. Alongside his work within Cambridge University, Leach was a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioural Sciences at Stanford University (1961); a member of the Social Science Research Council (1968); Vice President and then President of the Royal Anthropological Institute (1964-6, 1968-70), and an Honorary Fellow of the School of Oriental and African Studies. He won the Curl Essay Prize in 1951 and 1957 and the Rivers Medal in 1958, and delivered a controversial series of Reith Lectures in 1968.

Leach retired from the Provostship in 1978 and moved to Barrington. He died on 6 January 1989 [1].

Literature

Monographs

  • Political systems of highland Burma: A study of Kachin social structure, Harvard University Press, 1954.
    • Sistemas Polıticos da Alta Birmania, Sao Paulo: Ed. da Univesidade de Sao Paulo, 1996. (in Portughese)
  • Rethinking Anthropology, Robert Cunningham and Sons Ltd., 1961.
  • Pul Eliya: a village in Ceylon, Cambridge University Press, 1961.
  • A Runaway World?, London: BBC, 1968.
  • Genesis as Myth and other essays, Jonathan Cape, 1969.
  • Lévi-Strauss, Fontana Modern Masters, 1970.
  • Claude Lévi-Strauss, Viking Press, 1970.
  • Culture and Communication: The Logic by Which Symbols are Connected, Cambridge University Press, 1976.
  • Social Anthropology, Oxford University Press, 1982.
  • Structuralist Interpretations of Biblical Myth, 1983.
  • The Essential Edmund Leach, 2vols., Yale University Press, 2001.

Lectures

"REITH LECTURES
A Runaway World", BBC London, 1967

Collected works

Bibliography

  • Stephen Hugh-Jones, Edmund Leach 1910-1989: A Memoir, Cambridge: King's College, 1989.
  • Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (ed.), Edmund Leach: a bibliography, "Occasional Papers", no. 42, 1990.
  • Stanley Jeyaraja, Edmund Leach: an anthropological life, Cambridge University Press, 2002. Excepts

Documentary

Links