Christian Feest

Christian Feest (2015) San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico

Christian Feest (born July 20, 1945 at Broumov, Czechoslovakia, now Czech Republic), is an Austrian ethnologist and ethnohistorian.

Feest specialized in the Native Americans of the Northeast and in the Native American anthropology of art. He published widely acknowledged, pioneering research on the early European-Native American colonial contact period, and on the history of museum collections.

Feest studied at the University of Vienna in the 1960s. He started publishing articles in 1964. His 1969 dissertation was titled, "Virginia Algonkin, 1570-1703." He worked at the Museum für Völkerkunde in Vienna and at the university. Feest investigated the social and cultural aspects of Native American drinking for his Habilitationsschrift, titled Trinken und Trinkgewohnheiten im indianischen Nordamerika (1980).

Feest was professor of the ethnology of indigenous America at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main from 1993 to 2004. From 2004 to 2010 he served as director of the Museum für Völkerkunde (Museum of Ethnology) in Vienna.[1]

He has two prominent brothers, Gerhard Gleich and Johannes Feest. Christian Feest was the editor of the European Review of Native American Studies [2]

References

  1. Feest's Frobenius-Institut, Frankfurt am Main Webpage
  2. Bibliography for vols. 1(2), 1987−21(1), 2007.

Publications (selected)[1]

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Festschrift

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  1. Feest, Christian. "Bibliography 1965-2015". Research Gate. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
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