Kirin Narayan (born November 1959) is an Indian-born American anthropologist, folklorist and writer.
Narayan is the daughter of Narayan Ramji Contractor, a civil engineer from Nashik, and Didi Kinzinger, a German-American "artist, decorator, and builder of sustainable housing".
Narayan was born in Bombay, attended school in India and came to the United States in 1975. Narayan received a BA in creative writing from Sarah Lawrence College and went on to post-graduate studies in anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, receiving her PhD in 1987. She taught anthropology and South Asian studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She is a professor in the College of Asia and the Pacific at the Australian National University.
In 1989, she published Storytellers, Saints, and Scoundrels Folk Narrative in Hindu Religious Teaching; it received the Victor Turner Prize from the Society for Humanistic Anthropology and was co-winner of the Elsie Clews Prize for Folklore from the American Folklore Society. She was co-editor of Creativity/Anthropology (1993); in that year she was also named a Guggenheim Fellow in the field of anthropology and cultural studies.
In 1994, she published the novel Love, Stars and All That. Reviewing the novel, Indian poet and editor Dom Moraes praised the work, saying:
“This is a novel well received and achieved: it is also intelligent, excellently written, and revelatory of what it is like to be an American born in India. It makes one feel Narayan is that very rare bird, a born writer, and that she may fly far.”
Narayan published Mondays on the Dark Night of the Moon: Himalayan Foothill Folktales in 1997. In 2002 a new edition of the first collection of Indian folk tales in English, Mary Frere's Old Deccan Days, was published with an introduction by Narayan. In 2007, she published a memoir My Family and Other Saints. An autobiographical work in which "Gods, gurus and eccentric relatives compete for primacy", the New York Times described the work as an "enchanting memoir".