Contact Information
607 S Mathews Ave.
M/C 148
Urbana, IL 61801
Biography
Brenda Farnell is an anthropologist with a professional background in modern dance and dance education in England, U.K. Her broad research interests coalesce around an enduring interest in the rich complexity and diversity of body movement practices in human lives and their relative absence in Western modes of academic thought.
Research Interests
Anthropology of dance:
- human movement & performance
- arts/expressive culture
- body/embodied personhood
- socio-cultural theory and philosophy
- semiotic anthropology
- movement literacy (Labanotation)
- visual anthropology, multimedia ethnography
- Indigenous theater and postcolonialism
- American contemporary concert dance/choreographic process
Linguistic anthropology:
- discourse
- gesture and signed languages
- integration of speech and action
- ethnopoetics
- problems of embodiment in linguistics and social theory
- endangered languages and language revitalization
Ethnographic Areas:
- Indigenous North America
- Plains Indians
- field research among the Nakota (Assiniboine), Crow (Montana & Canada) and Kiowa, Comanche (Oklahoma). Plains storytelling performance with sign language
- Embodiment and Native Epistemologies in Contemporary Indigenous Theatre
Education
Ph.D. Social Cultural & Linguistic Anthropology, Indiana University (Bloomington), 1990
M.A. Anthropology of Human Movement, New York University, 1984
Advanced Diploma in Dance and Human Movement Studies, Laban Dance Center, Goldsmiths College, London University, England, 1977
B. Ed. (Teaching Diploma) I. M. Marsh College, Liverpool University, England. (Major: Dance Studies & Physical Education. Minor: Biology), 1969
Courses Taught
American Indians of Illinois (ANTH 288)
Body Personhood and Culture (ANTH 362)
Languages and Cultures of Native North America (ANTH 165)
Linguistic Anthropology (ANTH 270)
Talking Culture (ANTH 104)
Anthropology of Dance and Human Movement (ANTH 363)
Ethnography Through Language (ANTH 471)
Language in Culture I (ANTH 512)
Body Movement Literacy (ANTH 499)
Body, Personhood and Cultural Theory (ANTH 515)
Language in Culture II (ANTH 518)
Dynamic Embodiment (ANTH 523)
Additional Campus Affiliations
Head, Anthropology
Professor, Anthropology
Professor, American Indian Studies Program
Recent Publications
Mojica, M., & Farnell, B. (2023). Chocolate Woman Dreams the Milky Way: Mapping Embodied Indigenous Performance. University of Michigan Press. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.12183449
Farnell, B. M., & Davies Brenier, L. (Accepted/In press). Sign Language. In J. L. Jackson, Jr (Ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Anthropology (Oxford Bibliographies). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780199766567-0285
Farnell, B. (2018). Mindful Body. In H. Callan (Ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology (pp. 1-3). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118924396.wbiea2264
Farnell, B. (2018). Techniques of the Body. In H. Callan (Ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology (pp. 1-3). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118924396.wbiea2263
Farnell, B., & Wood, R. N. (2017). Kinaesthetic intimacy in a choreographic practice. In Collaborative Intimacies in Music and Dance: Anthropologies of Sound and Movement (pp. 65-95). Berghahn Books.