Ruth Behar-ethnographer, novelist, poet, and filmmaker-is the James W. Fernandez Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology at the University of Michigan. The recipient of two Fulbright Awards, a MacArthur ""Genius Grant,"" and a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, she was named a ""Great Immigrant"" by the Carnegie Corporation and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Behar is the author of several works of ethnography, including Translated Woman- Crossing the Border with Esperanza's Story and Traveling Heavy- A Memoir in Between Journeys, and the coming-of-age novels Lucky Broken Girl and Letters from Cuba. Born in Havana, she grew up in New York and has also lived in Spain and Mexico. Today she lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Behar has convinced me that ethnographic empathy will produce an anthropology that has greater meaning than the distanced and detached academic anthropology of the past. -Barbara Fisher, The Boston Globe Her luminous essays build cultural bridges and challenge conventional ways of doing anthropology. -Publishers Weekly As 'a woman of the border' . . . [Behar] infuses her vision with insight, candor and compassion. -Diane Cole, The New York Times Book Review A story that engages the emotions. Making the past visible, she preserves it against oblivion. -Stanley Trachtenberg, The Washington Post Book World Behar's collection of essays assesses the impact of emotion and experience on the process of research and writing, and on the relationship between the observer and the observed. . . . Intensely moving. -L. Beck, Choice In six strongly emotional essays, Behar makes a compelling case for the importance of revealing 'the self who observes.' -Anne Valentine Martino, The Ann Arbor News [Her] insistent looking back is what makes Ruth Behar's vision of anthropology so compelling. Memories do not vanish; they recede and leave traces. The anthropologist who makes herself vulnerable to these indications makes the world a more intelligible and hopeful place. -Judith Bolton-Fasman, The Jerusalem Report Twenty years since its publication, I'm still recommending The Vulnerable Observer to writers, colleagues, and friends. Just as brave and profound as it was then, it is now, continuing to offer insights into our shared humanity that are meaningful to scholar, scientist, and poet alike. -Richard Blanco, inaugural poet and author of For All of Us, One Today: An Inaugural Poet's Journey