McCurdy Distinguished Lecture
Contact
Carnegie Hall, Room 04F
651-696-6381
Professor Emeritus David W. McCurdy

Established to honor Professor Emeritus David W. McCurdy, who founded Macalester’s Anthropology Department in 1976, this annual lecture brings to campus leading scholars in all areas of anthropology. McCurdy is the author of numerous textbooks for teaching both cultural anthropology as well as anthropological methods, including the widely used Conformity and Conflict, now in its 15th edition. He is a renowned teacher and was made the subject of an article in 1977 by Change Magazine for innovative teaching in anthropology. He was the recipient of the Macalester Distinguished Teaching Award in 1995, and in 1997, he received the first teaching award given by the American Anthropological Association. History of Professor Emeritus David W. McCurdy from the 2016 event slide deck (PDF)
The 2025 McCurdy Distinguished Anthropology lecture, 鈥淭he End of Humanitarian Reason? Genocide, Gaza, and Illiberal Violence,鈥 was presented by Professor Nadia L. Abu El-Haj. Intention, guilt, and moral conscience are constitutive elements of 鈥渓iberal war鈥 鈥搕hat is, of what allegedly distinguishes just war and adjudicates the distinction between 鈥渢ragedies鈥 endemic to modern warfare on the one hand, and the commission of war crimes on the other. This lecture explores the ways in which Israel鈥檚 commitment to absolute destruction both reveals and unmakes many of the assumptions of that 鈥減ost-war鈥 order鈥 not just legally, but more generally, politically and ethically as well.
was presented by Professor Feldman鈥檚 research focuses on the Palestinian experience, both inside and outside of historic Palestine, examining practices of government, humanitarianism, policing, displacement, and citizenship. She is the author of Governing Gaza: Bureaucracy, Authority, and the Work of Rule, 1917-67; Police Encounters: Security and Surveillance in Gaza under Egyptian Rule; Life Lived in Relief: Humanitarian Predicaments and Palestinian Refugee Politics; and co-editor (with Miriam Ticktin) of In the Name of Humanity: The Government of Threat and Care.
鈥 was presented by Dr. Mark Turin. , linguist and occasional radio presenter, and an Associate Professor at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Turin offered a visual examination of several sites of the colonial contestation and resurgent Indigeneity on the university campus in Vancouver, Canada. Through example and illustration, Turin explored the wider relevance of decolonial interventions in educational spaces. With a particular focus on language oppression and revitalization, and the enduring relevance of Indigenous languages in negotiating the relationship between First Nations and various levels of settler colonial government, Dr. Turin asked what it means and what it would take to unsettle the university and to create a more equitable, inclusive and welcoming space for Indigenous voices, languages and cultures to thrive again.
鈥 was presented by . G眉rsel is a media anthropologist whose scholarship involves both the analysis and production of images. She explores how photography has policed borders and differences, and well as how photography and statecraft intersect in the making and unmaking of citizens. “Portraits of Unbelonging” is a double-sided history of migration, studying the history of Ottoman Armenian emigration from the Ottoman east to the United States from the politically fraught and often violent 1890s to the end of Abd眉lhamid II’s reign in 1909. A video of Dr. G眉rsel’s lecture will be available after the publication of her book on the same topic.
by The relationship between ethnography and art hinges on our human desire to recount the stories that bind us. But can we go deeper into new openings that others guide us to see? What are the ethical stakes of withering our attachments to a rigid self/subject bolstered by a discipline, as an act of undisciplining? Using scenes, questions and field notes as well as the artistic exhibit and the poem, Dr. Fullwiley will share how the back-and-forth of an anthropological approach stimulates conceptual openings with the potential to both unsettle and ground us in new ways.
by . Although trans, gender diverse, and gender non-binary people are increasingly visible in U.S. popular culture, political backlash and entrenchment in a gender binary continue to contribute to enacted stigma and violence. This talk examines trans experience through a biocultural lens focusing on how stress and stigma become embodied and explores ways forward to understand trans lives and 鈥渂iologies of resilience.鈥
,” by .This talk examines what complicates agreement on immigration reform, including why people migrate, demand for immigrant labor, effect of population growth and birth rates, fear of 鈥渢he browning of America,鈥 and pervasiveness of the Latino threat narrative, which characterizes Latinos as criminals, unable to assimilate, an economic drag on the economy, and 鈥渁nchor babies.鈥
, Rutgers University, titled, “Nutrition and Health in Wild Bornean Orangutans: Insights into the evolution of obesity in humans,” with introduction by Scott Legge, Associate Professor and Chair. Dr. Erin Vogel鈥檚 research covers a broad array of topics about how primates are able to acquire food for survival. As a primate dietary ecologist, she鈥檚 interested in food acquisition and diet selection in non-human primates. In particular, she studies how primates have adapted to maximize energy intake in the face of variable environments by examining the behavior, morphology, and physiology of study animals within an ecological context.
, author of Earth Beings, titled “Uncommoning Nature: Stories from the Anthropo-Not-Seen,” with introductions by Olga Gonzalez, Professor and Chair, and Macalester anthropology major Andrea Kvietok ’18.
, titled “Genghis Khan, Thomas Jefferson, & God: An Anthropological Look at Religious Wars and Religious Freedom,” with opening remarks by Professor Emeritus David W. McCurdy, and introductions by Olga Gonzalez, Associate Professor and Chair.