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John Ryle (anthropologist)

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John R. Ryle
John Ryle teaching on Rift Valley Institute Sudans Course
John Ryle teaching on Rift Valley Institute Sudans Course
BornShrewsbury, Shropshire, United Kingdom
OccupationWriter, anthropologist, film-maker, editor
NationalityBritish
GenreEthnography, reportage, essays, literary criticism
SubjectEastern Africa, Brazil, Human Rights, Religion, Visual Arts, Music and Literature

John Rowland Ryle is a British writer, anthropologist and specialist in Eastern Africa.[1] He is co-founder of the Rift Valley Institute, and Legrand Ramsey Professor of Anthropology at Bard College, NY.

Background

His father, John Creagh Ryle, a doctor and alpinist, was a general practitioner in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, where Ryle was born. His mother, Melody Ryle,[2] née Jackson, was a stalwart of the local Family Planning Association and a noted amateur botanist and gardener. Ryle is a grandson of the pioneer of social medicine John Alfred Ryle, a nephew of the astronomer Sir Martin Ryle, a great-nephew of the philosopher Gilbert Ryle, and a great-great grandson of John Charles Ryle, evangelical Bishop of Liverpool in the last decades of the nineteenth century.

Life and work

Ryle was educated at Shrewsbury School and Oxford University, where he graduated in English Language and Literature. He pursued postgraduate studies in social anthropology, conducting fieldwork among the Agar Dinka communities in today's South Sudan. In 1975 he became an assistant editor at the Times Literary Supplement. During the printers' strike at Times Newspapers, he founded, with Richard Boston, the acclaimed but short-lived periodical Quarto (1978–1981).[3] From 1982 to 1986 he worked for the Sunday Times in London as Deputy Literary Editor and, subsequently, as a feature writer. He has written for the London Review of Books,[4] the New York Review of Books,[5] the New Yorker,[6] the Los Angeles Times and various scholarly periodicals, and is a contributing editor of Granta.

Ryle also worked as a doorman at the Embassy Club in Bond Street, London, as a roustabout for the Royal American Shows and the Canadian Pacific Railway,[7] as ghost-writer of Mick Jagger's unpublished autobiography,[8][9] and as a travel writer.[10]

In the late 1980s, Ryle was a project officer at the Ford Foundation in Brazil and lived in an Afro-Brazllian community in Salvador da Bahia. In the 1990s, he worked as a consultant to relief and development organisations in Sudan and the Horn of Africa, including Save the Children Fund (UK). His weekly newspaper column, City of Words, appeared in The Guardian from 1995 to 1999. From 1996 to 1997, he was a research fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford. In the 1990s he became an activist in the International Campaign to Ban Landmines.

From 2001 to 2017, Ryle was successively chair and executive director of the Rift Valley Institute, a research and public information organisation operating in Eastern Africa that he founded with Jok Madut Jok and Philip Winter. He was a member of the International Eminent Persons Group, reporting on slavery and abduction in Sudan.[11][12] Since 2007, he has been Legrand Ramsey Professor of Anthropology at Bard College, a liberal arts college in New York state. He is a board member of the Human Rights Watch Africa Division and has also served on the boards of the Media Development Investment Fund and the scholarly journal African Affairs.

Bibliography

Books

  • The Sudan Handbook (2011) ISBN 978-1847010308
  • Warriors of the White Nile: the Dinka (1982) with Sarah Errington ISBN 978-0-7054-0700-7

Technical reports and academic research

Essays, reporting and other contributions

Translations

Film and video

References

  1. ^ Ascherson, N. (2012) How It Felt to Be There
  2. ^ Ryle, john. "Melody Ryle 1917-2007". johnryle.com.
  3. ^ "Quarto".
  4. ^ London Review of Books (ed.). "Contributor John Ryle". www.lrb.co.uk.
  5. ^ New York Review of Books (ed.). "Contributor John Ryle". www.nybooks.com.
  6. ^ The New Yorker (ed.). "Search contributor by name: John Ryle". www.newyorker.com.
  7. ^ Ryle, J. (1996). "Brit Crits Nix Car Wreck Sex Flick".
  8. ^ Rolling Stone (1983) Ghosting the story of Mick Jagger
  9. ^ Hind, J. (1997) Start me up... again
  10. ^ Lau, J. (1988) Interview with Joan Lau: Travels of Discovery
  11. ^ Ross, O. (2003) Research reclaims Sudan's 'lost souls'; Team put names, facesto those abducted, sold into slavery Investigation identified 11,000 people
  12. ^ Skinner, E. B. (2008) A Crime So Monstrous: Face-to-Face with Modern-Day Slavery