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William
W. Kelly
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William
W. Kelly (Ph.D., Brandeis 1980) is Professor
and Chairman of Anthropology. As Sumitomo Professor of Japanese Studies
he is a noted authority on the social and historical
anthropology of Japan. Kelly has focused much of his
research in the last two decades on regional agrarian
societies in Japan. Since 1996, however, Kelly has
been conducting field research on the history and
present patterns of professional baseball in the cities
of Osaka and Kobe. Kelly is now finishing a historical
ethnography of one of the Kansai baseball clubs, the
Hanshin Tigers, titled The Hanshin Tigers and the
Practices of Professional Baseball in Modern Japan.
He is also co-editing This Sporting Life: Sports
and Body Culture in Modern Japan with Atsuo Sugimoto
of Kyoto University of Education and Fanning the
Flames: Fandoms and Consumer Culture in Contemporary
Japan.
After
earning a B.A. in Anthropology from Amherst College
and a Ph.D. in Sociocultural Anthropology from Brandeis
University, Kelly joined the faculty at Yale in 1980.
He has served as Chair for the Department of Anthropology,
Chair for the Council on East Asian Studies and Director
of Undergraduate Studies for East Asian Studies. Kelly
is currently a member of the executive committees
for the Council on East Asian Studies, Council on
Southeast Asia Studies and Program on Agrarian Studies.
He is also a member of the steering committee of Yale
College and a faculty affiliate of the Peabody Museum
of Natural History. His professional affiliations
include membership in the American Anthropological
Association, American Ethnological Society, Society
for Cultural Anthropology, Association for Asian Studies
and the editorial board of the Journal of Japanese
Studies.
Mailing address:
Department of Anthropology
Yale University
P. O. Box 208277
New Haven, CT 06520-8277
Office address:
Room 201, 10 Sachem Street
Tel: (203) 432-3688
Fax: (203) 432-3669
Email:
william.kelly@yale.edu
Homepage: http://webspace.yale.edu/wwkelly
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