Cornell University Emblemthe department of Anthropology
Faculty
Billie Jean Isbell
Office: Uris 190
Phone: (607) 539-6484

My area of expertise is the Andean region of South America. My current interests include: ethnography and fiction, the Slow Food Movement, innovative technologies for teaching; and issues of global development.

I served as the director of the Andean program for Cornell International Institute for Food, Agriculture and Development from 1990 until 2002.

I also served as director of the Latin American Program at Cornell from 1987 to 1993 and again in 2001-2002.

I have been a Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Center and a Chercheur Assocíde Éole des Hautes Éudes, Paris. I have received awards and grants, fellowships and grants from: Woodrow Wilson, Fulbright, Mac Arthur, NEH, and A Ford Training Grant for Interdisciplinary Training of Graduate Students. The most recent grants include an Institute for the Social Sciences grant (2006) and two Faculty Innovation in Teaching grants from the office of the Provost (2005, 2007) and a grant from Olin library to create digital web site (2005) resulting in the following websites:
1) A Virtual Tour through Time and Space: Lessons from Vicos, Peru
2) A grant from Olin Digital Collection to create a site for Isbell's work

I am currently serving on the Inter-American Grassroots Development Fellowship selection committee.

Most recently, I have taught courses on:
Cornell Law School: Truth and Reconciliation in Democratizing Societies
Dept. of Anthropology Courses: Sex and Gender, Social Movements in Latin America and a Writing Seminar on Human Rights.
I am currently developing two undergraduate courses one on Anthropology and Global Development using the Vicos website and the other on Ethnography and Fiction.

My current book project is: Gender Journey to the Land of Neither Nor

Selected Publications

  Finding Cholita, an anthropological novel, University of Illinois Press (in press)
2005 Para Defendernos (Spanish Translation of To Defend Ourselves: Ritual and Ecology in an Andean Village, 1985 Waveland Press, originally published in 1978 by Texas Press, Cusco, Peru; Bartolomé las Casas with a new introduction and two new chapters)
  "Written on My Body" In Violence: Anthropological Encounters; edited by Ghassem-Fachandi, London, Berg Press (under review).
2004 "Protest Arts from Ayacucho, Peru: Song and Visual Artworks as Validation of Experience" In Quechua Expresivo: La Inscripción Voces Andinas pp 237-262; edited by G. Delgado and J.M. Schechter; Bonn, Germany: Bonn Americanist Studies. The art and recorded song texts are available on the isbellandes website above.
2003 "You Can Make a Difference": Human Rights as the Subject Matter for a First-Year Writing Seminar. In Local Knowledges, Local Practices: Writing in the Disciplines at Cornell, pp. 90-98. Edited by Jonathan Monroe, Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh Press.
  "Public Secrets from Peru". A drama currently on isbellandes.library.cornell.edu