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SHERRY ORTNER Class of WHS 1958

In 2003, Ortner wrote the book, New Jersey Dreaming: Capital, , and the Class of ’58, about her graduating class.

Sherry Beth Ortner (born September 19, 1941) is an American cultural anthropologist and has been a Distinguished Professor of at UCLA since 2004. Ortner grew up in a Jewish family in Newark, New Jersey, and attended Weequahic High School, as did and Richie Roberts. She received her B.A. from Bryn Mawr College in 1962. She then studied anthropology at the with and obtained her Ph.D. in anthropology in 1970 for her fieldwork among the Sherpas in Nepal.

Ortner has taught at Sarah Lawrence College, the , the University of California, Berkeley, , and the University of California, Los Angeles. She has done extensive fieldwork with the Sherpas of Nepal, on religion, politics, and the Sherpas’ involvement in Himalayan mountaineering. Her final book on the Sherpas, Life and Death on Mt. Everest, was awarded the J.I. Staley prize for the best anthropology book of 2004.

In the early 1990s, Ortner changed the focus of her research to the United States. Her first project was on the meanings and working of “class” in the United States, using her own high school graduating class as her ethnographic subjects. Her most recent book concerns the relationship between Hollywood films and American culture. She also publishes regularly in the areas of cultural theory and feminist theory.

Sherry Ortner was awarded a MacArthur "Genius" grant in 1990. In 1992, she was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She has been awarded the Retzius Medal of the Swedish for Anthropology and Geography. Ortner was previously married to Robert Paul, a cultural anthropologist now at ; and to Raymond C. Kelly, Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at The University of Michigan. She is currently married to Timothy D. Taylor, a Professor of and Musicology at UCLA.

Ortner is a well-known proponent of . She does not focus on societal reproduction but centers on the idea of “serious games”, on resistance and transformation within a society. She formed her ideas while working with Sherpas. S he is concerned with the dominant constraints of cultural understanding within , subversive to the idea of culture as being simply reproduced. Actors play with skill in a game of life with power and inequality. Seeing social structure as a kind of sporting arena, playing a game of life in the field, and that the rules are set by the society's structure. But one is a free agent; one does not have to follow the rules. One can break the rules of life. This results in one being carried away or results in changing the rules and boundaries by this action. Ortner focuses on the issues of resistance and transformation.