by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Advanced Seminar, Archaeology, Cultural Anthropology, General Anthropology, SAR Press
1994. Edited by Carole L. Crumley
In this volume, the authors take a critical step toward establishing a new environmental science by deconstructing the traditional culture/nature dichotomy and placing human/environmental interaction at the center of any new attempts to deal with global environmental change.
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Advanced Seminar, Cultural Anthropology, History/Social Sciences, SAR Press
2001. Edited by Dorothy Holland and Jean Lave
Nine ethnographers address such topics as the politically sexualized transformation of identities of women political prisoners in Northern Ireland; the changing character of political activism across generations in a Guatemala Mayan family; the cultural forms that mediate the struggles of working-class men on shop floors in England; and class and community struggles between the state and grassroots activists in New York.
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Ancient Americas, Archaeology, Non-Series, SAR Press, Southwest
2009. Stephen H. Lekson
While many works would have us believe that nothing much ever happened in the ancient Southwest, this book argues that the region experienced rises and falls, kings and commoners, war and peace, triumphs and failures.
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | History/Social Sciences, Indigenous Peoples, Resident Scholar, SAR Press, Southwest
1999. Garrick Bailey and Roberta Glenn Bailey
While many Native Americans have subordinated their tribal identity to their identity as Indians, unique historical circumstances have allowed the Navajos to maintain their uniqueness. This book examines these circumstances over the century and more that the tribe has lived on the reservation.
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Ancient Americas, Archaeology, Popular Archaeology, SAR Press, Southwest
2008. Edited by Suzanne K. Fish and Paul R. Fish
Written by archaeologists who have led the effort to excavate, record, and preserve the remnants of this ancient culture, the chapters illuminate the way the Hohokam organized their households and their communities, their sophisticated pottery and textiles, their irrigation system, the huge ballcourts and platform mounds they built, and much more.
by Sarah Soliz | Aug 14, 2019 | Advanced Seminar, Cultural Anthropology, General Anthropology, Recently Published Titles, SAR Press
2019. Edited by Sarah Besky and Alex Blanchette
The authors of this volume push ethnographic inquiry beyond the anthropocentric documentation of human work on nature in order to develop a language for thinking about how all labor is a collective ecological act.
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Advanced Seminar, Ancient Americas, Archaeology, SAR Press
1992. Edited by Arthur A. Demarest and Geoffrey W. Conrad
Employing data from central Mexico, the Maya area, coastal Peru, and highland Peru and Bolivia, directors of several major archaeological field projects interpret evidence of prehistoric ideology and address the question, has ideology any relevance in the reconstruction of prehistory?
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Advanced Seminar, Cultural Anthropology, SAR Press
2013. Edited by Patricia Spyer and Mary Margaret Steedly
This volume explores topics ranging from high art to mass media, religious iconography to pornography, and popular photography to political cartoons in a range of contexts and media including photography in early twentieth-century China, art and literature in contemporary South Africa, upscale real estate development in India, occult media images and the aesthetic of appearance in urban Indonesia, and film censorship in Nigeria.
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Advanced Seminar, Cultural Anthropology, History/Social Sciences, SAR Press
2007. Edited by Ann Stoler, Carole McGranahan, and Peter Perdue
Recasting the study of imperial governance, forms of sovereignty, and the imperial state, the authors pay close attention to non-European empires and the active trade in ideas, practices, and technologies among empires, as well as between metropolitan regions and far-flung colonies.
by operations | Jul 24, 2017 | Indigenous Peoples, Non-Series, SAR Press
2011. Joyce M. Szabo
Joyce Szabo’s examination of the two drawing books by Zotom and Howling Wolf encompasses their origins and the issues surrounding their commission as well as what the images say about their creators and their collector. Szabo augments the complete reproduction of each page with detail photographs of the drawings.