In 1984, Edith Turner was appointed as a lecturer in anthropology at the University of Virginia. To this day, she has some of the most widely spanning ethnographic fieldwork across the globe including, "the Ndembu of
Zambia (1951–1954), the
Bagisu of
Uganda (1966),
pilgrimage sites in Mexico (1969, 1970), and pilgrimages in
Ireland (1971, 1972), she also studied shrines in India and Sri Lanka (1979), Brazilian carnival and Afro-Brazilian cults (1979), Israeli rituals (1980), Japanese ritual and theater (1981), Yaqui ritual (1981, 1986), Israel pilgrimages (1983), African American healing churches (1985),
Civil War reenactments (1986–87), Korean shamanism (1987),
Inupiat festivals (1987–1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, ˜ 1993), suburban American rituals, ritual of the
Saami of
Kola Peninsula in Russia (1993), commemorations of the 150th anniversary of the
Great Famine of Ireland (1995), and Christian groups in the United States (1996)". == Legacy ==