Congratulations | Christine Lee published two SSCI papers


Title: You Are a Priest Forever: The Dual Sacramentality and Humanity of Andean Roman Catholic Priests in Talavera, Peru


Journal: Latin American Research Review (SSCI)


About Latin American Research Review :

The Latin American Research Review (LARR) publishes original research and review essays on Latin America, the Caribbean, and Latina/Latino studies. LARR covers the social sciences and the humanities, including the fields of anthropology, economics, history, literature and cultural studies, political science, and sociology. The journal reviews and publishes papers in English, Spanish, and Portuguese. All papers, except for book and documentary film review essays, are subject to double-blind peer review. LARR, the academic journal of the Latin American Studies Association, has been in continuous publication since 1965.



Title: Indigenous Record-Keeping and Hacienda Culture: Modern Khipu Accounting on the Island of the Sun


Journal: the Hispanic American Historical Review(SCCI)


About the Journal: Published in cooperationwith the Conference on Latin American History of the American Historical Association. Hispanic American Historical Review pioneered the study of Latin American history and culture in the United States and remains the most widely respected journal in the field. HAHR's comprehensive book review section providescommentary, ranging from brief notices to review essays, on every facet of scholarship on Latin American history and culture.



Christine Lee(李深情)is currently a postdoctoral researcher at East China Normal University. Sheholds a BA and MA from the University of Cambridge, and an MRes and PhD fromthe University of St Andrews. Her research interests focus on race, Catholicism, history, and anthropological theory.Her previous researchinvestigated a new generation of indigenous Catholic priests in the PeruvianAndes; her current research carries over this expertise in Catholicism andapplies it to anthropological theory, interrogating the influence of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) on the anthropological study of ritual via amid-century generation of British Catholic social anthropologists.