Misplaced Pages

María Cátedra

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "María Cátedra" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish. Click for important translation instructions.
  • Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Misplaced Pages.
  • Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
  • You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Misplaced Pages article at ]; see its history for attribution.
  • You may also add the template {{Translated|es|María Cátedra Tomás}} to the talk page.
  • For more guidance, see Misplaced Pages:Translation.
Spanish anthropologist (born 1947)

María Cátedra, also known as María Cátedra Tomás, (b. 4 March 1947) is a Spanish anthropologist. She was born in the Spanish city of Lerida and completed her undergraduate degree from the Complutense University of Madrid in 1971. She received a doctorate from the same university in 1972, and a second doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania in 1984. She later became a professor of social and cultural anthropology at the University of Complutense. Her field research took place in Spain and Portugal, in the towns of Asturias, Ávila, and Evora. Cátedra's early work in Asturias in the 1970s examined perceptions of death, suicide, and the afterlife in the community, and made use of techniques from symbolic anthropology. This project would have an influence on later studies of death and suicide in the region. Cátedra later moved to working in Ávila, where she analyzed the political aspects of the saints of the town. For this project, she used both fieldwork and analysis of documents from archive sources. A 2004 biographical dictionary of anthropologists described Cátedra as a "pioneer of urban anthropology in Spain".

References

  1. "Curriculum vitae". Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  2. ^ Amit, Vered, ed. (2005). "Cátedra, María". Biographical Dictionary of Social and Cultural Anthropology (2 ed.). London, UK: Routledge. pp. 123–124. ISBN 0-203-64459-X.


Stub icon

This biographical article about a Spanish anthropologist is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: