Professor Timothy Ingold

Professor Timothy Ingold
Professor Timothy Ingold
Professor Timothy Ingold

BA, PhD

Emeritus Professor

About
Email Address
tim.ingold@abdn.ac.uk
Office Address

Department of Anthropology
School of Social Science
University of Aberdeen
Aberdeen AB24 3QY
Scotland, UK

School/Department
School of Social Science

Biography

Tim Ingold was born in 1948. He received his BA in Social Anthropology from the University of Cambridge in 1970, and his PhD in 1976. For his doctoral research he carried out ethnographic fieldwork (1971-72) among the Skolt Saami of northeastern Finland, and the resulting monograph ('The Skolt Lapps Today', 1976) was a study of the ecological adaptation, social organisation and ethnic politics of this small minority community under conditions of post-war resettlement. Following a year (1973-74) at the University of Helsinki, he was appointed to a Lectureship in Social Anthropology at the University of Manchester. Here he continued his research on northern circumpolar peoples, looking comparatively at hunting, pastoralism and ranching as alternative ways in which such peoples have based a livelihood on reindeer or caribou. His second book, 'Hunters, pastoralists and ranchers: reindeer economies and their transformations', was published in 1980. A further spell of ethnographic fieldwork, this time among Finnish rather than Saami people, was undertaken in the district of Salla, in northern Finland, in 1979-80. The purpose of this research was to examine how farming, forestry and reindeer herding were combined on the level of local livelihood, to investigate the reasons for the intense rural depopulation in the region, and to compare the long term effects of post-war resettlement here with those experienced by the Skolt Saami.

Ingold’s research on circumpolar reindeer herding and hunting led to a more general concern with human-animal relations and the conceptualisation of the humanity-animality interface, as well as with the comparative anthropology of hunter-gatherer and pastoral societies, themes which he also explored while teaching courses at Manchester in economic and ecological anthropology. These concerns led to a number of essays which were collected together in his book 'The Appropriation of Nature', published in 1986. The same year also saw the publication of another major volume, 'Evolution and Social Life', a study of the ways in which the notion of evolution has been handled in the disciplines of anthropology, biology and history, from the late nineteenth century to the present. Two important conferences also took place in that year: the World Archaeological Congress (Southampton), in which Ingold organised a series of sessions devoted to cultural attitudes to animals, and the Fourth International Conference on Hunting and Gathering Societies (London), of which he was a principal organiser. Ingold edited one of the volumes to arise from the Southampton Congress, 'What is an animal?', published in 1988, and was co-editor of the two-volume work 'Hunters and Gatherers', consisting of papers from the London conference and published in the same year.

Through a reconsideration of toolmaking and speech as criteria of human distinctiveness, Ingold became interested in the connection, in human evolution, between language and technology. With Kathleen Gibson, he organised an international conference on this theme in 1990, and the resulting volume, edited by Gibson and Ingold ('Tools, language and cognition in human evolution'), was published in 1993. Since then, Ingold has sought ways of bringing together the anthropologies of technology and art, leading to his current view of the centrality of skilled practice. At the same time he has continued his research and teaching in ecological anthropology and, influenced by the work of James Gibson on perceptual systems, has been exploring ways of integrating ecological approaches in anthropology and psychology. In his recent work, linking the themes of environmental perception and skilled practice, Ingold has attempted to replace traditional models of genetic and cultural transmission, founded upon the alliance of neo-Darwinian biology and cognitive science, with a relational approach focusing on the growth of embodied skills of perception and action within social and environmental contexts of development. These ideas are presented in his book 'The Perception of the Environment' (2000), a collection of twenty-three essays written over the previous decade on the themes of livelihood, dwelling and skill.

Ingold was appointed to a Chair at the University of Manchester in 1990, and in 1995 he became Max Gluckman Professor of Social Anthropology. He was Editor of 'Man' (the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute) from 1990 to 1992, and edited the Routledge 'Companion Encyclopedia of Anthropology', published in 1994. In 1988 he founded the Group for Debates in Anthropological Theory, and edited a volume of the first six annual debates ('Key Debates in Anthropology', 1996). He was elected to a Fellowship of the British Academy in 1997, and of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2000. In 1999 he was President of the Anthropology and Archaeology Section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science.

In 1999, Tim Ingold moved to take up the newly established Chair of Social Anthropology at the University of Aberdeen, where he has been instrumental in setting up the UK's youngest Department of Anthropology, established in 2002. In his latest research he has been exploring three themes, all arising from his earlier work on the perception of the environment, concerning first, the dynamics of pedestrian movement, secondly, the creativity of practice, and thirdly, the linearity of writing. These issues all come together in his current project, funded by a 3-year ESRC Professorial Fellowship (2005-08), entitled 'Explorations in the comparative anthropology of the line'. Starting from the premise that what walking, observing and writing all have in common is that they proceed along lines of one kind and another, the project seeks to forge a new approach to understanding the relation, in human social life and experience, between movement, knowledge and description. At the same time, and complementing this study, Ingold is researching and teaching on the connections between anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture (the '4 As'), conceived as ways of exploring the relations between human beings and the environments they inhabit. Taking an approach radically different from the conventional anthropologies and archaeologies 'of' art and of architecture, which treat artworks and buildings as though they were merely objects of analysis, he is looking at ways of bringing together the 4 As on the level of practice, as mutually enhancing ways of engaging with our surroundings.

Internal Memberships

Head, School of Social Science, 2008-2011

Research

Research Overview

Geographical: Finland, Lapland, northern Europe, northern circumpolar (including N America, Siberia).

Interests relating to past fieldwork: Work, environment and identity among Saami and Finnish people in Lapland; reindeer herding and husbandry in northern Finland; domestic organisation and rural economy among northern Finnish farmers; migration and rural depopulation; long-term effects of displacement and resettlement; social and environmental aspects of technical change.

Theoretical interests: Ecological approaches in anthropology and psychology; comparative anthropology of hunter-gatherer and pastoral societies; human-animal relations; theories of evolution in anthropology, biology and history; relations between biological, psychological and anthropological approaches to culture and social life; environmental perception; language, technology and skilled practice; anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture; the anthropology of lines and line-making.

Current Research

Learning is understanding in practice: exploring the relations between perception, creativity and skill (2002-2005). See http://www.abdn.ac.uk/creativityandpractice/

This project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Board, was undertaken in conjunction with the School of Fine Art at the University of Dundee. The project combines approaches from fine art and anthropology to examine the relation between perception, creativity, innovation and skill, through an empirical study of the knowledge practices of fine art. The research has also explored the potential of a practice-based approach to teaching and learning in both disciplines.

Culture from the ground: walking, movement and placemaking (2004-2006). See http://www.abdn.ac.uk/anthropology/walking.php

This project, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, builds on a previous study that focused specifically on recreational rambling and hillwalking in Scotland. The current research is designed to reveal the sociality of walking over a broader canvas. Through an ethnography of everyday pedestrian movements we are exploring how walking binds time and place in people’s experience, relationships and life-histories

Lines from the past: towards an anthropological archaeology of inscriptive practices

This project is to convert a series of six public lectures delivered in Edinburgh in May 2003 into a short book, Lines from the past, scheduled for completion early in 2006. These were the Rhind Lectures, sponsored by the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. In them, I sketched an initial agenda for the comparative anthropology of the line, focusing on the themes of: language, music and notation; traces, threads and surfaces; the gestural trace and the point-to-point connector; writing and drawing, and the significance of the straight line.

Explorations in the comparative anthropology of the line (2005-2008)

This project, funded by a Professorial Fellowship from the Economic and Social Research Council, pursues the implications of treating the human being not as a self-contained entity but as growing along a way of life. Every such way is a line of some kind. Through a comparative and historical anthropology of the line, the research will forge a new approach to understanding the relation, in human life and experience, between movement, knowledge and description. As a work of intellectual synthesis, the research will be library- based, spanning literatures in several disciplines within and beyond the social sciences. It will lead to the production of two major books. 'Life on the line' will explore how, in the transition from the trace to the connector, the growing line was shorn of the movement that gave rise to it. 'The 4 As' will examine the relations between anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture as disciplinary paths along which environments are perceived, shaped and understood.

 

Bringing things back to life: creative entanglements in a world of materials (2011-2013)

Conventionally, creating things has been understood as imposing form onto matter. Funded by a Major Research Fellowship from the Leverhulme Trust, in this project I aim to challenge this ‘hylomorphic’ model of creation and to replace it with an ontology that assigns primacy to forces and materials. I will show that: (1) that things are not reducible to objects; (2) they are generated within processes of life; (3) a focus on life-processes requires us to attend to flows of materials; (4) these flows are creative, and (5) creative practice unfolds along a meshwork of interwoven lines.

 

Knowing From the Inside: Antropology, Art, Architecture and Design (2013-18)

This project, funded by an Advanced Grant from the European Research Council, promises to reconfigure the relation between the practice of academic inquiry in the human sciences and the knowledge to which it gives rise. Conventional research protocols expect the scholar to treat the world as reserve from which to draw empirical material for subsequent interpretation in light of appropriate theory. Against this, we will establish and trial an alternative procedure whereby theory is not applied after the fact, to a corpus of material already gathered, but rather grows from our direct, practical and observational engagements with the stuff of the dwelt-in world. Theoretical thinking, then, is embedded in observational practice, or knowing in being, rather than vice versa. This way of knowing, by studying with things or people instead of making studies of them, has long been key to anthropology. It is also, however, central to arts practice, as it is to the contingent disciplines of architecture and design. All four disciplines offer paths to knowing-in-being which challenge the division between data gathering and theory building that underwrites normal science. By bringing them together, this project will customise this general approach to knowing to specific contexts of practice including landscape management, craft heritage, environmental conservation, building and restoration, drawing and notation. Our method will be distinguished by observation and experiment, the outcomes of which will be not just written texts but works of art or craft, performances and installations. The project will contribute to both education and design for sustainable living through a renewed emphasis on the improvisational creativity and perceptual acuity of practitioners. It will promote the dissemination of knowledge through shared experience, and advance a new view of interdisciplinarity as an intertwining of lines of interest.

Teaching

Teaching Responsibilities

Introduction to Anthropology I (one-semester course for around 200 Level 1 students, taught from 1999 - when teaching in Anthropology receommenced at the University of Aberdeen - until 2004). Course code AT1002.

Anthropological Theory (one-semester course for around 30 Level 3 students, 2001-03). Course code AT3501.

The 4 As: Anthropology, Archaeology, Art and Architecture (one-semester course for around 12 Level 4 students, 2004 to present). Course code AT4511.

Publications

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  • A life in books

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 157-159
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Preface: Biosocial Becomings

    Ingold, T., Palsson, G.
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Forewords and Postscripts
  • The creativity of undergoing

    Ingold, T.
    Pragmatics & Cognition, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 124-139
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • After Behrmann: Three short tales of self-reinforcement

    Ingold, T.
    Grain, Vapor, Ray: Textures of the Anthropocene. Klingan, K., Sepahvand, A., Rosol, C., Scherer, B. (eds.). The MIT Press, pp. 137-146, 10 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Crafting landscapes: In conversation with Tim Ingold

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of Landscape Architecture, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 50-53
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Is there life amidst the ruins?

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 29-33
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Making and growing: Anthropological studies of organisms and artefacts

    Hallam, E. (ed.), Ingold, T. (ed.)
    Ashgate, Farnham. 258 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Making and growing: An introduction

    Hallam, E., Ingold, T.
    Making and Growing: Anthropological Studies of Organisms and Artefacts. Ingold, T., Hallam, E. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 1-24, 24 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Preface and Acknowledgements, Making and Growing: Anthropological Studies of Organisms and Artefacts

    Hallam, L., Ingold, T.
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Forewords and Postscripts
  • Religious perception and the education of attention

    Ingold, T.
    Religion, Brain and Behavior, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 156-158
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Resonators uncased: Mundane objects or bundles of affect?

    Ingold, T.
    Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 517-521
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • That's enough about ethnography

    Ingold, T.
    Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 383-395
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Étre au monde: Quelle experience commune?

    Ingold, T., Descola, P., Lussault, M. (ed.)
    Presses universitaires de Lyon, Lyon. 75 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Dreaming of dragons: On the imagination of real life

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 734-752
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Epilogue

    Ingold, T.
    Nomadic and indigenous spaces: Productions and cognitions. Miggelbrink, J., Habeck, J. O., Mazzullo, N., Koch, P. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 259-262, 4 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Of blocks and knots: Architecture as weaving

    Ingold, T.
    The Architectural Review , pp. 26-27
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Being alive to a world without objects

    Ingold, T.
    The Handbook of Contemporary Animism. Harvey, G. (ed.). Acumen Pub., pp. 213-225, 13 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Designing Environments for Life

    Ingold, T.
    Anthropology and Nature. Hastrup, K. (ed.). Routledge, pp. 233-246, 14 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Biosocial Becomings: Integrating Social and Biological Anthropology

    Ingold, T. (ed.), Palsson, G. (ed.)
    Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 288 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Review of Eastern Sami Atlas, by Tero Mustonen and Kaisu Mustonen

    Ingold, T.
    Arctic, vol. 66, no. 2, pp. 232-234
    Contributions to Journals: Reviews of Books, Films and Articles
  • The metamorphosis of trees

    Ingold, T.
    David Nash: A Natural Gallery. Payne, M. (ed.). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, pp. 34-49, 16 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Making: Anthropology, Archaeology, Art and Architecture

    Ingold, T.
    Routledge, London. 163 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Foreword to the Special Issue

    Ingold, T., Martin, H. (ed.), Education in the North
    Education in the North, vol. 20, no. Special Issue
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Anthropology beyond humanity

    Ingold, T.
    Suomen Antropologi: Journal of the Finnish Anthropological Society , vol. 38, no. 3, pp. 5-23
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Designing environmental relations: From opacity to textility

    Anusas, M., Ingold, T.
    Design Issues, vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 58-69
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • From description to correspondence: Anthropology in real time

    Ingold, T., Gatt, C.
    Design Anthropology: Theory and Practice. Gunn, W., Otto, T., Charlotte-Smith, R. (eds.). Bloomsbury, pp. 139-158, 20 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Le Nord est partout

    Ingold, T.
    Entropia, no. 15, pp. 37-48
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Lines in time

    Ingold, T.
    Oxford Art Journal, vol. 36, no. 3, pp. 463-464
    Contributions to Journals: Reviews of Books, Films and Articles
  • Prospect

    Ingold, T.
    Biosocial Becomings: Integrating Social and Biological Anthropology. Ingold, T., Palsson, G. (eds.). Cambridge University Press, pp. 1-21, 21 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • The art of inquiry: Reflections of an anthropologist

    Ingold, T.
    Yes Naturally: How Art saves the World. ter Gast, E., Oosterling, H., van der Tuin, I., Verbeek, P. P. (eds.). NAI, pp. 172-177, 6 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • The atmosphere

    Ingold, T.
    Chiasmi International , vol. 14, pp. 75-87
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • The conical lodge at the centre of the earth-sky world

    Ingold, T.
    About the Hearth: Perspectives on Home, Hearth and Household in the Circumpolar North. Anderson, D., Wishart, R., Vaté, V. (eds.). Berghahn Books, pp. 11-28, 18 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • The maze and the labyrinth: walking and the education of attention

    Ingold, T.
    Walk-On: From Richard Long to Janet Cardiff. Art Editions North, pp. 7-11, 5 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • The maze and the labyrinth: Reflections of a fellow-traveller

    Ingold, T.
    Relational archaeologies: Humans, animals, things. Watts, C. (ed.). Routledge, pp. 245-249, 5 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Walking with Dragons: An Anthropological Excursion on the Wild Side

    Ingold, T.
    Animals as Religious Subjects: Transdisciplinary Perspectives. Deane-Drummond, C., Clough, D., Artinian-Kaiser, R. (eds.). Bloomsbury, pp. 35-58
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Looking for lines in nature

    Ingold, T.
    Earthlines, vol. 3, pp. 48-51
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Toward an Ecology of Materials

    Ingold, T.
    Annual Review of Anthropology, vol. 41, pp. 427-442
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Imagining Landscapes: Past, Present and Future

    Janowski, M. (ed.), Ingold, T. (ed.)
    Ashgate, Farnham, UK. 184 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • An Archaeological Lesson in the Reclamation of Anthropology

    Ingold, T.
    Norwegian Archaeological Review, vol. 45, no. 1, pp. 97-99
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Trazendo as coisas de volta à vida: Emaranhados criativos num mundo de materiais

    Ingold, T.
    Horizontes Antropologicos, vol. 17, no. 37, pp. 25-44
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Lines and the weather

    Ingold, T.
    Vital Beauty: Reclaiming aesthetics in the tangle of technology and nature. Ruskin, J., Brouwer, J., Mulder, A., Spuybroek, L. (eds.). V2_Publishing, pp. 12-28, 17 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Making culture and weaving the world

    Ingold, T.
    Matter, Materiality and Modern Culture. Taylor and Francis Inc., pp. 50-71, 22 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Introduction: The perception of the user-producer

    Ingold, T.
    Design and Anthropology. Gunn, W., Donovan, J. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 19-33, 15 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Introduction: Imagining Landscapes

    Ingold, T.
    Imagining Landscapes: Past, Present and Future. Taylor and Francis AS, pp. 1-18, 18 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Introduction: Imagining Landscapes: Past, present and future

    Ingold, T.
    Imagining Landscapes: Past, present and future. Janowski, M., Ingold, T. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 1-18, 18 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • No more ancient; no more human: The future past of archaeology and anthropology

    Ingold, T.
    Archaeology and Anthropology: Past, Present and Future. Shankland, D. (ed.). Berg Publishers, pp. 77-89, 13 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Preface: Imagining Landscapes: Past, Present and Future

    Janowski, M., Ingold, T.
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Forewords and Postscripts
  • The shape of the land

    Ingold, T.
    Landscapes Beyond Land: Routes, Aesthetics, Narratives. Arnason, A., Ellison, N., Vergunst, J., Whitehouse, A. (eds.). Berghahn Books, pp. 197-208, 12 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Worlds of sense and sensing the world: Reply to David Howes

    Ingold, T.
    Social Anthropology, vol. 19, no. 3, pp. 313-317, 323-327
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Being Alive: Essays on Movement, Knowledge and Description

    Ingold, T.
    Routledge, London. 270 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Closing Keynote Speech

    Ingold, T.
    Histories From the North: Environments, Movements and Narratives. Ziker, J., Stammler, F. (eds.). Boise State University, pp. 198-210, 13 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Introduction: Redrawing Anthropology

    Ingold, T.
    Redrawing Anthropology: Materials, movements, lines. Ingold, T. (ed.). Ashgate, pp. 1-20, 20 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Redrawing Anthropology: Materials, movements, lines

    Ingold, T.
    Ashgate, Farnham. 216 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • The man in the machine and the self-builder

    Ingold, T.
    Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, vol. 35, no. 3-4, pp. 353-364
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • What is a human being?

    Ingold, T.
    American Anthropologist, vol. 112, no. 4, pp. 513-514
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Footprints through the weather-world: walking, breathing, knowing

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, vol. 16, no. Supplement s1, pp. S121-S139
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Ways of mind-walking: reading, writing, painting

    Ingold, T.
    Visual Studies, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 15-23
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Anthropology comes to life

    Ingold, T.
    General Anthropology, vol. 17, no. 1, pp. 1-4
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Epilogue: Conversations with landscape

    Ingold, T.
    Conversations with landscape. Benediktsson, K., Lund, K. A. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 241-251, 11 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • In defence of handwriting

    Ingold, T.
    University of Durham.
    Other Contributions: Other Contributions
  • The textility of making

    Ingold, T.
    Cambridge Journal of Economics, vol. 34, no. 1, pp. 91-102
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • The wedge and the knot: hammering and stitching the face of nature

    Ingold, T.
    Nature, Space and the Sacred: Transdisciplinary Perspectives. Bergmann, S., Bedford-Strohm, H. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 147-161, 15 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • 12 As

    Ingold, T.
    Fieldnotes and sketchbooks: challenging the boundaries between descriptions and processes of describing. Gunn, W. (ed.). Peter Lang Pub., pp. 109-134, 26 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Against space: place, movement, knowledge

    Ingold, T.
    Boundless Worlds: An Anthropological Approach to Movement. Kirby, P. (ed.). Berghahn Books, pp. 29-43, 15 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Stories against classification: transport, wayfaring and the integration of knowledge

    Ingold, T.
    Kinship and Beyond: The Genealogical Model Reconsidered. Berghahn Books, pp. 193-213, 21 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Point, Line and Counterpoint: From Environment to Fluid Space

    Ingold, T.
    Neurobiology of the "Umwelt": How Living Beings Perceive the World. Berthoz, A., Christen, Y. (eds.). Springer-Verlag, pp. 141-155, 14 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • When ANT meets SPIDER: social theory for arthropods

    Ingold, T.
    Material Agency: Towards a Non-Anthropocentric Approach. Knappett, C., Malafouris, L. (eds.). Springer Science+Business Media, pp. 209-215, 6 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Bindings against boundaries: entanglements of life in an open world

    Ingold, T.
    Environment and Planning A, vol. 40, no. 8, pp. 1796-1810
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Introduction

    Ingold, T., Vergunst, J.
    Ways of walking: Ethnography and practice on foot. Ingold, T., Vergunst, J. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 1-19, 19 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Ways of Walking: Ethnography and Practice on Foot

    Ingold, T. (ed.), Vergunst, J. (ed.)
    Ashgate, Aldershot, United Kingdom. 218 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Being along: place, time and movement among Sami people in northern Finland

    Mazzullo, N., Ingold, T.
    Mobility and Place: Enacting Northern European Peripheries. O. Baerenholdt, J., Granaas, B. (eds.). Ashgate, pp. 27-38, 11 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Relational thinking - Capacity for culture: A response to Read and Lane (AT 24[2])

    Ingold, T.
    Anthropology Today, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 25
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • Review of 'Of passionate curves and desirable cadences: themes on Waiwai social being', by George Mentore

    Ingold, T.
    Tipiti, vol. 6, no. 1-2, pp. 63-76
    Contributions to Journals: Comments and Debates
  • When biology goes underground: genes and the spectre of race

    Ingold, T.
    Genomics, Society and Policy, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 23-37
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Anthropology is not ethnography

    Ingold, T.
    Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 154, pp. 69-92
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Introduction, Ways of Walking: Ethnography and Practice on Foot

    Ingold, T., Vergunst, J. L.
    Ways of Walking: Ethnography and Practice on Foot. Taylor and Francis, pp. 1-19, 19 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • The social child

    Ingold, T.
    Human Development in the Twenty-First Century: Visionary Ideas from Systems Scientists. Fogel, A., King, B. J., Shanker, S. G. (eds.). Cambridge University Press, pp. 112-118, 7 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Movement, knowledge and description

    Ingold, T.
    Holistic anthropology: emergence and convergence. Ulijaszek, S., Parkin, D. (eds.). Berghahn Books, pp. 194-211, 18 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • The 4 As (Anthropology, Archaeology, Art and Architecture): reflections on a teaching and learning experience

    Ingold, T.
    Ways of knowing: new approaches in the anthropology of knowledge and learning. Harris, M. (ed.). Berghahn Books, pp. 287-305, 18 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Earth, sky, wind, and weather

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, vol. 13, no. Suppl. 1, pp. s19-s38
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • The Trouble with "Evolutionary Biology"

    Ingold, T.
    Anthropology Today, vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 13-17
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Against soundscape

    Ingold, T.
    Autumn leaves: sound and the environment in artistic practice. Carlyle, A. (ed.). Double Entendre, pp. 10-13, 4 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Comment

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of Iberian Archaeology, vol. 9-10, pp. 313-317
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Creativity and Cultural Improvisation

    Hallam, E., Ingold, T.
    Berg Publishers, Oxford
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Creativity and cultural improvisation: an introduction

    Ingold, T., Hallam, E.
    Creativity and cultural improvisation. Ingold, T., Hallam, E. (eds.), pp. 1-24, 23 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Introduction: Part 1

    Ingold, T.
    Creativity and Cultural Improvisation. Hallam, E., Ingold, T. (eds.). Routledge, pp. 45-54, 10 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Lines: A Brief History

    Ingold, T.
    Routledge, Oxon, UK. 186 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Materials against materiality

    Ingold, T.
    Archaeological Dialogues, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 1-16
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Review: Doreen Massey, For Space, Sage, London (2005) viii + 222 pages, £18.99 paperback.

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of Historical Geography, vol. 32, no. 4, pp. 891-893
    Contributions to Journals: Reviews of Books, Films and Articles
  • Against human nature

    Ingold, T.
    Evolutionary episetmology, language and culture. Aerts, D., Gontier, N. (eds.), pp. 259-281, 22 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Fieldwork on foot: perceiving, routing, socializing

    Lee, J., Ingold, T.
    Locating the Field. Space, Place and Context in Anthropology. Collins, P., Coleman, S. (eds.), pp. 67-86, 19 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Perceived and measured levels of environmental pollution: Interdisciplinary research in the subarctic lowlands of northeast European Russia

    Walker, T. R., Habeck, J. O., Karjalainen, T. P., Virtanen, T., Solovieva, N., Jones, V., Kuhry, P., Ponomarev, V. I., Mikkola, K., Nikula, A., Patova, E., Crittenden, P. D., Young, S. D., Ingold, T.
    Ambio, vol. 35, no. 5, pp. 220-228
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Rethinking the animate, re-animating thought

    Ingold, T.
    Ethnos, vol. 71, no. 1, pp. 9-20
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Up, across and along

    Ingold, T.
    Place and Location: Studies in Environmental Aesthetics and Semiotics, vol. 5, pp. 21-36
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Walking the plank: meditations on a process of skill

    Ingold, T.
    Defining technological literacy: towards an epistemological framework. Dakers, J. (ed.). Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 65-80, 15 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • The eye of the storm: visual perception and the weather

    Ingold, T.
    Visual Studies, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 97-104
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • A manifesto for the anthropology of the North

    Ingold, T.
    Connections: local and global aspects of Arctic social systems. Sudkamp, A. (ed.), pp. 61-71, 10 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Brereton’s brandishments.

    Ingold, T.
    Journal of Critical Realism, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 112-127
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Comments on Christopher Tilley: The Materiality of Stone: Explorations in Landscape Phenomenology. Oxford: Berg, 2004.

    Ingold, T.
    Norwegian Archaeological Review, vol. 38, no. 2, pp. 122-129
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Epilogue: towards a politics of dwelling

    Ingold, T.
    Conservation and Society, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 501-508Special
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
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