Visting Lecturer: Dr. Erika Robb Larkins
Dr. Erika Robb Larkins, University of Oklahoma, 10:00 – 11:30 am, 201A Criser Hall (LVV Room), “Guarding the Body: Private Security Work in Rio de Janeiro”
Dr. Erika Robb Larkins, University of Oklahoma, 10:00 – 11:30 am, 201A Criser Hall (LVV Room), “Guarding the Body: Private Security Work in Rio de Janeiro”
Dr. Erika Robb Larkins, University of Oklahoma, 10:00 – 11:30 am, 201A Criser Hall (LVV Room), “Guarding the Body: Private Security Work in Rio de Janeiro”
Dr. Glenn H. Shepard, Jr., Museu Paranese Emilio Goeldi, Belem do Para, Brazil, 3pm, 1208 Turlington Hall, “Close Encounters: The Dilemmas of Contact for Isolated Indigenous Peoples of the Amazon”
Dr. Glenn H. Shepard, Jr., Museu Paranese Emilio Goeldi, Belem do Para, Brazil, 3pm, 1208 Turlington Hall, “Close Encounters: The Dilemmas of Contact for Isolated Indigenous Peoples of the Amazon”
Marcelo Salazar, Instituto Socioambiental, ISA, Brazil, 2-3:30 pm, 376 Grinter Hall, “Red Alert for the Xingu River”
Marcelo Salazar, Instituto Socioambiental, ISA, Brazil, 2-3:30 pm, 376 Grinter Hall, “Red Alert for the Xingu River”
Professor Michael S. Nassaney, Western Michigan University, 4:30 pm, 100 Smathers, “Shifting Contours of Archaeological Knowledge in Colonial Contexts”, reception to follow
Professor Michael S. Nassaney, Western Michigan University, 4:30 pm, 100 Smathers, “Shifting Contours of Archaeological Knowledge in Colonial Contexts”, reception to follow
SHIFTING CONTOURS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE IN COLONIAL CONTEXTS Professor Michael S. Nassaney Department of Anthropology Western Michigan University Narratives about the past are never divorced from the social contexts in which they are created. Colonial contexts have been especially subject to political influence when they involve descendant communities, directly or tangentially. Archaeology at Fort St. …
SHIFTING CONTOURS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE IN COLONIAL CONTEXTS Professor Michael S. Nassaney Department of Anthropology Western Michigan University Narratives about the past are never divorced from the social contexts in which they are created. Colonial contexts have been especially subject to political influence when they involve descendant communities, directly or tangentially. Archaeology at Fort St. …