The full manuscript of Neighborhoods from the Perspective of Anthropological Archaeology has been submitted for review to the Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association. Congratulations on the hard work, excellent contributions, and sustained effort by: Ricardo R. Antorcha Pedemonte, Alleen Betzenhauser, Richard Blanton, David Chicoine, Bonnie J. Clark, Stephen Dueppen, Lane F. Fargher, April Kamp-Whittaker, Mark Lehner, Timothy R. Pauketat, Monica L. Smith, Elizabeth C. Stone, Edward Swenson, Lise A. Truex, Steven Wernke, Ashley Whitten!
Thanks are in order to each author for contributing to this project, which goes all the way back to our original CFP in 2014 for the 80th Annual Meeting of the SAA!
Showing posts with label Society for American Archaeology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Society for American Archaeology. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Wednesday, February 8, 2017
Short Piece in Society for American Archaeology's Archaeological Record
Thanks to Lewis Borck (University of Leiden) and Matthew Sanger (Binghamton) as well as the many other contributors to the latest SAA Archaeological Record (Vol. 17 No. 1) for their contribution and invitation to me to participate in the Anarchy and Archaeology volume. The topics covered range well beyond strictly archaeological topics, and so many anthropologists, philosophers, educators, etc. will find provocative material there. How wonderful also to reconnect in a collaborative way with a former TA of mine, Uzma Rizvi! Here's the link: http://www.saa.org/ AbouttheSociety/Publications/ TheSAAArchaeologicalRecord/ tabid/64/Default.aspx
Sunday, August 3, 2014
Call for Papers - Theorizing and Excavating Neighborhoods - SAA 2015
My colleague, Lise Truex (University of Chicago) and I are organizing a session for the 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology in San Francisco, April 15-19, 2015. Our session is entitled "Theorizing and Excavating Neighborhoods." We've confirmed our esteemed discussants Steve Wernke (Vanderbilt) and Elizabeth C. Stone (SUNY Stony Brook). We're still seeking abstracts! The original due date for abstracts was to be August 11th, 2014, but we can be a little flexible. Don't hesitate to be in touch or to circulate the CFP.
email Dave - DavidPacificoPhD (@) gmail.com
email Lise - liset437 (@) uchicago.edu
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CALL FOR PAPERS
for
Theorizing and Excavating
Neighborhoods
A
Session Proposal
Submitted
to the Society for American Archaeology
For
the 2015 Annual Meeting in San Francisco
Organized
by
David Pacifico, Ph.D. and Lise Truex, Ph.D.
candidate (University of Chicago)
The
‘neighborhood’ encompasses complex social and analytical phenomena linking
households, settlements, and regions. This session investigates the
‘neighborhood’ as a concept, a heuristic, and a social formation as well as the
relationship between those dimensions.
On
a theoretical level, what anthropological concepts does the ‘neighborhood’
imply or highlight (e.g., kinship, space, economy)? How might we conceive of
‘neighborhood’ when planning, conducting, and reporting research?
As anthropologists, we aim to
examine and compare how neighborhoods are configured, produced, and supported
at different times and places in human (pre)history. What emic forms of
neighborhoods existed (e.g., the Aztec calpulli,
Andean ayllu, and Old Babylonian babtum)? How can archaeologists study
neighborhoods as imagined as well as
physically constructed or culturally practiced?
Methodologically, we wish to examine
how archaeologists can address neighborhoods in all the many formations and
configurations that may exist. Of course, we also would like to examine the
limitations of ‘neighborhood’ as a heuristic and to discover what directions
might move us through and beyond the neighborhood.
Contributors
are encouraged to place the study of neighborhoods within broader analyses of
urbanization, early towns, rural settlements, and the production of regional
landscapes.
Discussants:
Steve Wernke, Ph.D. (Vanderbilt) and Elizabeth C. Stone, PhD (SUNY Stony Brook)
Please
send presentation abstracts of 200 words or less to both:
davidpacificophd@gmail.com
and liset437@uchicago.edu
Deadline
for paper abstract submission to Dave and Lise is: August 11, 2014.
Deadline
for full session lineup: September 11, 2014.
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