Brenneis has worked in linguistic and political anthropology specializing in the culture and society of Fiji, particularly Fiji's Indian community.[1][2] Through his work he examines the intersections of communication, performance, and power.[5]
In 1969 Brenneis married Wynne Scott Furth, a Stanford classmate and a Harvard University law student.[6] Brenneis also entered graduate school at Harvard University where he worked with Klaus-Friedrich Koch, Keith Kernan and Claudia Mitchell-Kernan.[1]
His doctoral advisor was Klaus-Friedrich Koch, with whom he studied conflict resolution in Fiji.[7]
Both Brenneis and Furth traveled to Fiji and did field work focusing on the anthropology of law and conflict. Furth's legal training and experience in municipal and administrative law has enriched Brenneis' analysis of dispute resolution. Brenneis received his Ph.D. in social anthropology in 1974[1] with a dissertation on Conflict and communication in a Fiji Indian community (1974).[8]
Brenneis, Donald Lawrence; Myers, Fred R. (1984). Dangerous words : language and politics in the Pacific. New York: New York University Press. ISBN0814710514.
Brenneis, Donald (1996). "Telling troubles: Narrative, conflict, and experience". In Briggs, Charles L. (ed.). Disorderly discourse : narrative, conflict, & inequality. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 41–52. ISBN0195087763.
Brenneis, Donald Lawrence; Macaulay, Ronald K. S. (1996). The matrix of language : contemporary linguistic anthropology. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press. ISBN0813323207.
Merry, Sally Engle; Brenneis, Donald Lawrence (2004). Law & empire in the Pacific : Fiji and Hawaiʻi (1st ed.). Santa Fe, N.M.: School of American Research Press. ISBN1930618247.
References
^ abcdeDarnell, Regna; Gleach, Frederic Wright, eds. (2002). "Donald Brenneis, 2001-2003". Celebrating a century of the American Anthropological Association : presidential portraits. Arlington, VA: American Anthropological Association. pp. 305–308. ISBN978-0-8032-1720-1.
^ abcdFaust, Zaner (1978). "Digging up the Present"(PDF). Participant: The Pitzer College Magazine. Fall: 4–9, 23–24. Archived from the original(PDF) on February 10, 2022. Retrieved February 10, 2022.