Chowning's work was interdisciplinary, bridging language, ethnography and history. She has made substantial contributions to Oceanic comparative linguistics, and her Lakalai-English dictionary is perhaps the largest dictionary of any Western Oceanic language.[1]
Selected works
Chowning, Ann, and Ward H. Goodenough. 1965. Lakalai political organization. Anthropological Forum: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Comparative Sociology 1 (3-4), 412-473
Chowning, Ann. 1969. The Austronesian languages of New Britain. Papers in linguistics of Melanesia 2, 17–46.
Chowning, Ann. 1973. An introduction to the peoples and cultures of Melanesia. Addison-Wesley. Second edition 1977, published by Cummings.
Chowning, Ann. 1979. Leadership in Melanesia. The Journal of Pacific History 14 (2), 66–84.
Blust, Robert, David F. Aberle, N. J. Allen, R. H. Barnes, Ann Chowning, Otto Chr. Dahl, Jacques Faublée, James J. Fox, George W. Grace, Toichi Mabuchi, Kenneth Maddock, and Andrew Pawley. 1980. Early Austronesian Social Organization: The Evidence of Language. Current Anthropology 21 (2), 205–226.
Chowning, Ann, and Ward H. Goodenough. 2016 [1954-]. A dictionary of the Lakalai (Nakanai) language of New Britain, Papua New Guinea. Asia-Pacific Linguistics Open Access. [1]
Awards and other honours
In 2005, Chowning was honoured with a Festschrift, A Polymath Anthropologist: Essays in Honour of Ann Chowning.[3]
Chowning was awarded an Honorary Life Membership of the Association of Social Anthropologists of Aotearoa/New Zealand (ASAA/NZ).[4]
Iris 'Ann Chowning' is a beardless iris, described as having "intense, velvety red flowers with deep yellow highlights", bred by Chowning's father, lawyer Frank Chowning, and presumably named in her honour.[5]