Snapshot: Dimitris Xygalatas in Mauritius

UConn anthropologist Dimitris Xygalatas shares his photos from the field.

Doing fieldwork can be stressful, but also involves some great moments. (Photo from Dimitris Xygalatas)

Doing fieldwork can be stressful, but also involves some great moments. (Dimitris Xygalatas/UConn Photo)

Every year, Dimitris Xygalatas travels to a field site in Mauritius, an island in the middle of the Indian Ocean, to undertake research.

Xygalatas, an assistant professor of anthropology, studies rituals such as dancing and music. At first glance, rituals might seem pointless, he says, but they actually play a fundamental role in people’s individual and social lives.

Mauritius is an ideal place to study culture, and particularly ritual, because it is one of the most diverse societies in the world. The local population includes multiple ethnic, religious, and linguistic groups, that practice a wide range of religious rituals ranging from the mundane to the extraordinary.

In his research, Xygalatas combines ethnographic observation with scientific measurements, using a wide variety of measures to study the effects and the importance of these cultural practices on individuals and societies.