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Professor of Anthropology / Professor of Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies / Psychotherapist, Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis

I am a Professor of Anthropology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Washington University in St. Louis and a practicing psychotherapist specializing in eating disorders, trauma, personality disorders, and self-harm. I received her PhD in anthropology from the University of California, San Diego and completed an NIMH post-doctoral fellowship in Culture and Mental Health at the University of Chicago. After joining the faculty at Washington University, I obtained her Master of Social Work degree at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work.

My academic work sits at the intersections of anthropology, philosophy, and psychology. As an anthropologist, I am interested in the interplay between culture and subjective experience; specifically, how fundamental elements of being such as self, body, other, intersubjectivity, time, affect, and memory are culturally inflected, yet also idiosyncratically emergent within a given person’s life history. My clinical work engages the other side of these issues by working with individuals in the throes of existential crisis, who are struggling to make sense of their suffering, the world, and their places within it.

I am the author of _Jesus in Our Wombs: Embodying Modernity in a Mexican Convent_ (UC Press, 2005)
and _Famished: Eating Disorders and Failed Care in America_ (UC Press 2019).

Experience

  • 2020–present
    Professor of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis
  • 2008–present
    Founder and Psychotherapst, Lumen Psychotherapy
  • 2010–2020
    Associate Professor of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis
  • 2002–2010
    Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis
  • 1999–2002
    Postdoctoral Fellow in Culture and Mental Health, University of Chicago