Michael Jackson is an internationally acclaimed anthropologist and award-winning poet and novelist, and founder of existential anthropology, a non-traditional sub-field of anthropology which is strongly influenced by critical theory, American pragmatism, and existential-phenomenological thought. Born in Nelson, New Zealand, he received a BA from Victoria University of Wellington, an MA from the University of Auckland, and a PhD from Cambridge University (UK). He has travelled widely, worked in a variety of jobs and has carried out ethnographic fieldwork in Sierra Leone and Aboriginal Australia, much of which features in his memoir The Accidental Anthropologist. He is Distinguished Professor of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School, in the United States. Formerly he taught at Massey University, the Australian National University, Indiana University Bloomington and the University of Copenhagen. He won the 1976 Commonwealth Poetry Prize for Latitudes of Exile, the 1981 New Zealand Book Award for Wall, and the 1995 Montana New Zealand Book Award for Pieces of Music. In 1982 he was recipient of the Katherine Mansfield Fellowship. He has written 30 books, including the award-winning Paths Toward a Clearing and At Home in the World and Road Markings: an Anthropologist in the Antipodes. In 2006, Jackson was awarded an honorary doctorate by Victoria University.