Headshot of Merry White

Professor Emeritus of Anthropology

Research AreasAnthropology of food; Japan; urban social spaces; travel; Asian American women, travel and tourism

Merry (“Corky”) White is Professor of Anthropology at Boston University, with specialties in Japanese studies, food, and travel. A caterer prior to entering graduate school, she has written two cookbooks, one of which—first published in the mid-1970s—was recently reissued by Princeton University Press. 

She currently has the following projects in the works:

“Don’t Tell the Kinder,” a family history of art and rescue in the exhibition, “Try All What is Possible”: How Emil Singer’s Art Saved Lives, 1936-1942.

Professor White was also recently featured in a WNPR podcast about miniaturization called “Audacious Little Things: Elevation by Reduction”.

Selected Publications

  • Book Chapter, “Body, Tool and Technique: Elements of Work in the Japanese Kitchen” in Philosophies of Food, editors, Andrea Borghini and Patrik Engisch, 2021
  • Journal Article, “When Yoshu Whiskey becomes Washu Whisky” in Arena (in Japanese) Fall 2020.
  • Essay, “Always More to Learn: The Contemporary Coffee Scene in Japan” in Standart, Winter 2019-2020.
  • Journal Article, “Assumptions and Distortions: Dore on Equality in Japanese Schooling” in Pacific Affairs, Winter, 2019.
  • Review Essay, “Consuming Life in Post-Bubble Japan” in Social Science Japan Journal, Summer 2019

For a detailed academic bio and CV, please see Professor White’s Department Profile.