Name Christopher Hallpike | ||
Books The Konso of Ethiopia: A Study o, On Primitive Society: A, How We Got Here: From Bo, The Foundations of Primitiv, The Principles of Social |
C. R. Hallpike (Christopher Robert; born 1938) is an English and Canadian anthropologist and an Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at McMaster University, Ontario, Canada. He is known for his extensive study of the Konso of Ethiopia and Tauade of New Guinea.
Contents
Early life and education
Hallpike was educated at Clifton College, and Queen’s College, Oxford, where he read PPE. After graduation he studied at the Institute of Social Anthropology, Oxford, under Evans-Pritchard and Rodney Needham. Fieldwork among the Konso in Ethiopia 1965-67 was followed by a D.Phil in 1968.
Career
After graduateion, Hallpike was appointed a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, and in 1970-72 carried out fieldwork among the Tauade of Papua New Guinea. He returned to Dalhousie as a Research Associate in 1972-73, and after four years in England as a private researcher, in 1978 was appointed Professor of Anthropology at McMaster University, Ontario, until retiring in 1998 as Professor Emeritus. He became a Canadian citizen in 1982. Hallpike was a Bye Fellow of Robinson College, Cambridge, in 1984-85, 1988-89, and 1992, and was awarded a D.Litt by Oxford University in 1989.
Research
Hallpike has researched and published on a wide range of subjects, including Ethiopia and Papua New Guinea; stateless societies; tribal warfare; systems of seniority based on age; the symbolism of hair style; sociocultural evolution; cultural materialism; Piaget, developmental psychology and primitive thought; the evolution of morality; the relevance of Darwinism and sociobiology in anthropology (especially the weaknesses of adaptationism); and the history of science. His photographs of 1960s Ethiopia and Papua New Guinea have recently been added to the Pitt Rivers Museum online photographic collection.