Carmen Bernand (born Carmen Muñoz on 19 September 1939) is a French anthropologist, historian and Latin Americanist.
Carmen Bernand was born in France to Spanish refugee parents, she lived in Argentina for 25 years, where she studied ethnology at the University of Buenos Aires. At the end of 1964, she moved to Paris and prepared a postgraduate thesis under the direction of Claude Lévi-Strauss. In 1966, she married the epigraphist (1923âÂÂ2013).
Bernand is a specialist in the history of New World and Latin America, she conducted field surveys of Andean populations in Argentina, Peru and Ecuador. Since the late 1980s, she has devoted herself to the historical anthropology of Latin America.
She teaches at the Paris Nanterre University and is a member of the Institut Universitaire de France. She is also a deputy director of the ('Centre for Research on the American Worlds') since 1999 and member of editorial board of the anthropological and museological journal Gradhiva.
With Serge Gruzinski, she published and two volumes of . She is the author of and a heavily illustrated pocket book for âÂÂDécouvertes GallimardâÂÂ, , which has been translated into ten languages, including English. She also wrote in Spanish a crime novel set in Inca Empire.