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20 Facts About Audrey Richards

1.

Audrey Richards produced notable ethnographic studies, the most famous of which is Chisungu: A Girl's initiation ceremony among the Bemba of Zambia.

2.

Audrey Richards's work covered diverse topics such as nutrition, family structure, migration, and ethnicity.

3.

Audrey Richards conducted her field work in Zambia, Uganda and Essex.

4.

Audrey Richards was educated at Downe House School and Newnham College, Cambridge, where she read natural sciences.

5.

Audrey Richards served as a relief worker in Germany for two years before returning to England and beginning graduate work.

6.

Audrey Richards received her doctorate in 1931 for her thesis which was published in revised form as Hunger and work in a savage tribe: a functional study of nutrition among the Southern Bantu.

7.

Audrey Richards was a lecturer at the London School of Economics and.

8.

In 1956, Audrey Richards returned to her alma mater Newnham College, Cambridge, where she had been elected a fellow.

9.

Audrey Richards was Smuts Reader in Anthropology at Cambridge between 1961 and 1967.

10.

Audrey Richards attended the London School of Economics where she was supervised by Bronislaw Malinowski.

11.

Audrey Richards went to Zambia in 1930 for her research for Hunger and work in a savage tribe: a functional study of nutrition among the Southern Bantu.

12.

Audrey Richards is regarded as a founder of the field of nutritional anthropology.

13.

Audrey Richards published Land, Labour and diet in Northern Rhodesia this was produced partly to support the nutritional interests of the International African Institute.

14.

Audrey Richards later carried out an ethnographic study of the village of Elmdon, Essex, England, where she lived for many years.

15.

Audrey Richards witnessed the Chisungu ritual during her first field work in 1931.

16.

Audrey Richards argues that rituals sustain cultural values of a society and are an intentional action rather than an expression of sentiment or emotion as in the explanation of ritual as a circular nature as advanced by Durkheim and Radcliffe-Brown.

17.

Audrey Richards offers multiple explanations that include the society, the groups within it and individuals.

18.

Audrey Richards adds that these varied approaches will vary according to the expressed purposes and interpretations of the actors.

19.

Audrey Richards was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1974.

20.

Audrey Richards died in 1984 near Midhurst, West Sussex, England.