Influencing Thought, Creating Change
Transcription
Influencing Thought, Creating Change
2014 CATALOG Influencing Thought, Creating Change CONTENTS Archaeology Around the Globe 1 Archaeology in the Americas 6 Contemporary Social Issues 17 Cultural Anthropology 26 Globalization 30 History and Social Sciences 32 Indigenous Studies 33 Language and Biological Anthropology 42 Native American Art and Culture 45 Santa Fe and the Southwest 49 Timeless Classics 52 Southwest Crossroads 53 Author Index 54 Title Index 56 Ordering Information SAR Press is the publishing arm of the School for Advanced Research, a nonprofit center for advanced study in human culture and evolution founded in 1907 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. SAR Press publishes scholarly and general-interest books on anthropology (including an extensive list of archaeology titles), Native American art, and the American Southwest. Our books are dedicated to furthering scholarship on, and public understanding of, human culture, behavior, and evolution. inside back cover sarpressfacebook.sarweb.org SAR Press strives to be ecologically responsible. That is why we have chosen a printer that uses 10% PCW and Forest Stewardship Council™ certified paper for this catalog. You can help by passing along the SAR Catalog to another person or recycling it responsibly. SAR Press staff above from left: Lisa Pacheco, Cynthia Selene, John Noonan, Ellen Goldberg, Lynn Thompson Baca; below left: Cynthia Dyer. Cover image: All Hands on Deck, copyright The Singh Twins: www.singhtwins.co.uk www.sarpress.org 888-390-6070 The Ancient City New Perspectives on Urbanism in the Old and New World Edited by Joyce Marcus and Jeremy A. Sabloff 2008. 424 pp., figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-02-1, $34.95 Resident Scholar Series ARCHAEOLOGY AROUND THE GLOBE Ancient cities have much to tell us not only about the social, political, religious, and economic conditions of their times—but also about our own. Ongoing excavations all over the world are enabling scholars to document intracity changes through time, city-to-city interaction, and changing relations between cities and their hinterlands. As the chapters in this volume reveal, archaeologists now know much more about the founding and functions of ancient cities, their diverse trade networks, their heterogeneous plans and layouts, and their various lifespans and trajectories. Contributors: Kathryn A. Bard, Karl W. Butzer, Janet DeLaine, Lothar von Falkenhausen,Mogens Herman Hansen, Kenneth G. Hirth, Michael J. Jones, Jonathan Mark Kenoyer,Chapurukha M. Kusimba, Joyce Marcus, Craig Morris, K. Anne Pyburn, Colin Renfrew,Jeremy A. Sabloff, Elizabeth C. Stone, Bruce G. Trigger “This will be obligatory reading not only for all who seek to push forward research on particular cases of urban development, but also for those who seek to build new theoretical constructs.”—Henry Wright, University of Michigan The Archaeology of Colonial Encounters Archaic State Interaction The Eastern Mediterranean in the Bronze Age Edited by William A. Parkinson and Michael L. Galaty 2010. 336 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-20-5, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Comparative Perspectives Edited by Gil J. Stein 2005. 464 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-43-5, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-44-2, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series Archaic States Edited by Gary M. Feinman and Joyce Marcus In current archaeological research the failure to find common ground between world-systems theory believers and their counterparts has resulted in a stagnation of theoretical development with regard to modeling how early state societies interacted with their neighbors. This book is an attempt to redress these issues. By shifting the theoretical focus away from questions of state evolution to state interaction, the authors develop anthropological models for understanding how ancient states interacted with one another and with societies of different scales of economic and political organization. One of their goals has been to identify a theoretical middle ground that is neither dogmatic nor dismissive. The result is an innovative approach to modeling social interaction that will be helpful in exploring the relationship between social processes that occur at different geographic scales and over different temporal durations. Contributors: John F. Cherry, Eric H. Cline, Michael L. Galaty, P. Nick Kardulias, William A. Parkinson, Robert Schon, Susan Sherratt, Helena Tomas, David Wengrow “An excellent example of a meeting of the minds to hammer at an interesting and current set of problems affecting archaeologists around the world.… It is not necessary for the reader to be a ‘believer’ in world-systems theory to benefit from these essays.” —Thomas F. Tartaron, University of Pennsylvania 1998. 448 pp., figures, tables, references, index, 6x9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-99-2, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series www.sarpress.org 1 ARCHAEOLOGY AROUND THE GLOBE RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Big Histories, Human Lives Tackling Problems of Scale in Archaeology Edited by John Robb and Timothy R. Pauketat 2013. 296 pp., figures, maps, table, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-64-9, $39.95 Advanced Seminar Series Big Histories, Human Lives is a re-theorizing of scale and change in human history as both are related to the big picture—the relationships between time, the environment, and all of human experience on earth. Contributors: Clive Gamble, Chris Gosden, Michael Heckenberger, Scott MacEachern, Timothy R. Pauketat, Susan Pollock, John Robb, Kenneth E. Sassaman, Ruth M. Van Dyke “Since the 1980s, archaeologists have struggled with growing, impressive bodies of data about long-term social change and outmoded theories used to explain change. Under criticism by post-processualists and others, grand narratives of change were questioned and even the idea of having grand narratives was rejected. This occurred especially in the demolition of neoevolutionist theory (of stages and levels), which created a kind of theoretical anomie. This book is a call to restore grand narratives of change, and the authors are determined to put human beings— who were effectively ignored in systems theories, environmental determinist theories, adaptationism, and functionalism—as central actors in their own histories. Archaeologists: this way forward.” —Norman Yoffee, Senior Fellow, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University “Through vivid and thought-provoking examples, the volume’s various authors demonstrate how the archaeological, anthropological, and historical examination of past human societies has many lessons of direct and immediate relevance to people in the modern world. It also recasts the focus of scholars from these disciplines in turn, arguing that there are bigger problems and better ways of examining them than the approaches many have chosen.” —David G. Anderson, University of Tennessee, author of Climate Change and Cultural Dynamics: A Global Perspective on Mid-Holocene Transitions “This highly provocative book breaks new ground in examining the articulation between the longue durée and short-term, small-scale human experiences. A stellar group of scholars re-energize our thinking about long-term history without losing sight of microscale events and human lives. The authors experiment with multiple, innovative theoretical approaches in a series of case studies that will be of great interest to any scholar grappling with the investigation of humans in deep time.” —Kent G. Lightfoot, University of California, Berkeley 2 888-390-6070 Breathing New Life into the Evidence of Death Contemporary Approaches to Bioarchaeology Edited by Aubrey Baadsgaard, Alexis T. Boutin, and Jane E. Buikstra 2011. 360 pp., figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-48-9, $39.95 Advanced Seminar Series Taking cues from current theoretical perspectives and capitalizing on the strengths of new and sophisticated methods of analysis, Breathing New Life into the Evidence of Death showcases the vibrancy of bioarchaeological research and its potential for bringing “new life” to the field of mortuary archaeology and the study of human remains. These new trajectories challenge old stereotypes, redefine the way research of human remains should be accomplished, and erase the divide that once separated osteologists from archaeologists. Through case studies ranging from body piercing in prehistoric Chile to Christian burials in early medieval Ireland, the contributors to this book take a broad and deep look at themes including archaeologies of identity, the contemporary sociopolitical effects of bioarchaeological research, and materiality in the mortuary record. Contributors: Aubrey Baadsgaard, Alexis T. Boutin, Jane E. Buikstra, Pamela L. Geller, Christopher J. Knüsel, María Cecilia Lozada, Susan Pollock, Rachel E. Scott, Ann L. W. Stodder, Christina Torres-Rouff “This book is a robust contribution toward bringing bioarchaeology firmly into the larger sphere of anthropological approaches to the past. Although the case studies range far and wide, the editors’ attention to disciplinary history and a productive thematic organization result in a fresh collection that should inspire both students and seasoned practitioners. The authors, while grounding their work firmly in established bioarchaeological method, also chart new—and essential— theoretical terrain that represents the future of contextualized work in the field.” —Ann M. Kakaliouras, Whittier College “Breathing New Life into the Evidence of Death is an important contribution to bioarchaeology, mortuary archaeology, osteology, and osteoarchaeology. By focusing explicitly on ‘bioarchaeology as contextualized archaeology,’ the authors demonstrate several important points by means of their individual case studies: 1. contextualized bioarchaeology requires integration of both the contextual/historical and the biological/osteological, moving considerably beyond two separate analyses; 2. contextualized bioarchaeology can bring new insights to the study of the individual and social embodiment, as well as materiality and the social collective; and 3. there is real value and significance in engaging and communicating with those who have a claim, relation, or other legitimate interest in the mortuary site being studied.” —Lynne Goldstein, Michigan State University A Catalyst for Ideas Anthropological Archaeology and the Legacy of Douglas W. Schwartz Edited by Vernon L. Scarborough 2005. 440 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-70-1, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-71-8, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series ARCHAEOLOGY AROUND THE GLOBE The Evolution of Leadership Transitions in Decision Making from Small-Scale to Middle-Range Societies Edited by Kevin J. Vaughn, Jelmer W. Eerkens, and John Kantner 2010. 366 pp., 29 figures, 15 tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-13-7, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Leaders make decisions that have significant impacts on the lives of others. They have the ability to influence events and impact the evolutionary trajectories of societies. Leaders exist in all societies, ranging from smaller-scale heads of households to larger-scale elected governing bodies to dictators with vast coercive powers at their disposal. This book brings together the perspectives of cultural anthropologists and archaeologists to explore why and how leadership emerges and variously becomes institutionalized among disparate groups. Contributors: Jeanne E. Arnold, Douglas W. Bird, Rebecca Bliege Bird, Brenda J. Bowser, Jelmer W. Eerkens, John Kantner, Chapurukha M. Kusimba, Sibel B. Kusimba, John Q. Patton, Timothy R. Pauketat, Charles Stanish, Kevin J. Vaughn, Polly Wiessner “A series of authoritative snapshots describe what archaeology and ethnography can tell us about leadership in small- and medium-sized societies. The geographic coverage is broad, the range of examples impressive. This is an important and timely contribution to the longstanding—and often repetitive—debates about the nature of leadership in smaller-scale societies.” —Brian Fagan, Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara The Flow of Power Ancient Water Systems and Landscapes Last Hunters, First Farmers New Perspectives on the Prehistoric Transition to Agriculture Edited by T. Douglas Price and Anne Birgitte Gebauer 1993. 372 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-91-6, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Making Alternative Histories The Practice of Archaeology and History in Non-Western Settings Edited by Peter R. Schmidt and Thomas C. Patterson 1995. 332 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-93-0, $19.95 Advanced Seminar Series Vernon L. Scarborough 2003. 232 pp., color & black-andwhite illustrations, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-32-9, $34.95 Resident Scholar Series www.sarpress.org 3 ARCHAEOLOGY AROUND THE GLOBE The Model-Based Archaeology of Socionatural Systems Edited by Timothy A. Kohler and Sander E. van der Leeuw Memory Work Archaeologies of Material Practices 2007. 320 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, tables, appendices, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-87-9, $34.95 Resident Scholar Series Edited by Barbara J. Mills and William H. Walker 2008. 320 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-88-6, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Memory making is a social practice that links people and things across time and space and that, ultimately, has material consequences. The intersection of matter and social practice becomes archaeologically visible through the deposits created during social activities. Memories are made, not just experienced, and their material traces allow us to understand the materiality of these practices. Indeed, materiality is not just material culture repackaged. Instead, it is about the interaction of humans and materials within a set of cultural relationships. In this book the authors focus on a set of case studies that illustrate how social memories were made through repeated, patterned, and engaged social practices. “Memory work” also refers to the interpretive activities scholars perform when studying social memory. The contributors to this volume share a common goal: to map out the different ways to study social memories in past societies programmatically and tangibly. Contributors: Susan D. Gillespie, Rosemary A. Joyce, Lisa J. Lucero, Lynn Meskell, Barbara J. Mills, Axel E. Nielsen, Timothy R. Pauketat, Joshua Pollard, Ann B. Stahl, William H. Walker “This book makes a substantial contribution to archaeological theory and practice.… Social memory is of wide interest in the social sciences and the humanities. The approach advocated here, to focus on practice and materiality, has the potential to introduce a different twist on the subject.” —Julia A. Hendon, Gettysburg College “It remains an exemplary and original volume and one which deserves to be widely read and cited and for that reason, is a recommended read for anyone interested in the complexities of understanding the archaeological record.” —Gavin Lucas, Journal of Field Archaeology 4 888-390-6070 Postcolonial Archaeologies in Africa Edited by Peter R. Schmidt 2009. 304 pp., figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-08-4 $34.95 This book features some of the foremost archaeologists from Africa and the United States and presents cutting-edge proposals for how archaeology in Africa today can be made more relevant to the needs of local communities, from enhancing cultural capacity to cope with AIDS to promoting economic development and human rights claims, generating locally rooted intellectual paradigms, and preventing the degradation of heritage resources. The authors highlight research programs that offer positive alternatives to colonial-era theories and explore African quests for identities forged from within, the struggle to find meaning in African practice of archaeology, and how to make archaeology work for individual and collective well-being. Contributors: Flordeliz T. Bugarin, Felix A. Chami, James Denbow, Faye V. Harrison, Augustin F. C. Holl, Karega-Munene, Chapurukha M. Kusimba, Roderick J. McIntosh, Morongwa Mosothwane, Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu, Nonofho Mathibidi Ndobochani, Michael Rowlands, Peter R. Schmidt, Alinah K. Segobye, Jonathan R. Walz “There is a growing body of scholars committed to archaeology in Africa who will find this volume compelling...this is new material...highly innovative and will be used in many archaeology courses whether dealing with African archaeology, post-colonialism, indigenous pasts, heritage, rights, and so on.” —Lynn Meskell, Stanford University “Perhaps one of the most significant contemporary collections of articles on archaeology in continental Africa, Schmidt’s edited volume is a ‘must-read’ for any archaeologist interested in public, community, and postcolonial methodologies.” —Uzma Z. Rizvi, Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies, Pratt Institute ARCHAEOLOGY AROUND THE GLOBE Roots of Conflict Soils, Agriculture, and Sociopolitical Complexity in Ancient Hawai‘i Edited by Patrick V. Kirch 2011. 240 pp., color plates, figures, maps, tables, notes, glossary, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-26-7, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Roots of Conflict presents the efforts of a team of social and natural scientists to understand the complex, systemic linkages between land, climate, crops, human populations, and their cultural structures. The research group has focused on what might seem to some an unlikely locale to investigate a set of problems with worldwide significance: the Hawaiian Islands. Though it is perhaps the most isolated archipelago on Earth, Hawai‘i is a “model system” for teasing out key connections between land, agriculture, and society. Contributors: Carolyn K ēhaunani Cachola-Abad, Oliver A. Chadwick, Sam M. Gon III, Michael W. Graves, Anthony S. Hartshorn, Sara Hotchkiss, Patrick V. Kirch, Thegn N. Ladefoged, Charlotte Lee, Shripad Tuljapurkar, Peter M. Vitousek, Karl S. Zimmerer “Hawai‘i is the Polynesian archipelago that prehistorically developed the largest population and highest political complexity within less than a millennium of settlement. [Roots of Conflict] tells the fascinating story of those developments and uses them as a model in two senses. As a model of human societal evolution, Hawai‘i offers the advantages of comparing six major islands differing in area, elevation, rainfall, soil age and fertility, and hence human population size and social and political organization. As a model of interdisciplinary science, this book uses Hawai‘i to showcase how collaboration between archaeologists, ecologists, paleobotanists, quantitative demographers, soil scientists, and scholars analyzing oral traditions can yield conclusions far exceeding the capacity of any one of those fields alone.” —Jared Diamond, professor of geography at UCLA and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of books including Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse “When Thomas Malthus was twelve, Captain James Cook ‘discovered’ the Hawaiian islands, where in 900 years some 200 intrepid Polynesian voyagers had grown to 450,000. This comprehensive new report by members of the Hawai‘i Biocomplexity Project leads us— literally from the ground up—through soils and rainfall, via production systems, demography, and the rich genealogical traditions of the islands, to an integrated assessment of the emergence of the Hawaiian archaic state. Kirch and his colleagues provide a model for how researchers can study societies over the long term in their dynamic environments without reductionism, leaving us to marvel both at the achievements of the Polynesians and the ingenious research that here elucidates their complexity and evolution.” —Tim Kohler, Regents Professor of Archaeology, Washington State University Uruk Mesopotamia & Its Neighbors Cross-Cultural Interactions in the Era of State Formation Edited by Mitchell S. Rothman 2001. 594 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-03-9, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series www.sarpress.org 5 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS Archaeology & Cultural Resource Management Visions for the Future Edited by Lynne Sebastian and William D. Lipe Foreword by Charles R. McGimsey III 2010. 368 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-16-8, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series By most estimates, as much as 90 percent of the archaeology done in the United States today is carried out in the field of cultural resource management. The effects of this work on the archaeological record, the archaeological profession, and the heritage of the American people would be difficult to overemphasize. CRM archaeology affects a wide range of federally funded or authorized developments. It influences how archaeologists educate their students, work with indigenous people, and curate field records and artifacts. The contributors hope that this book will serve as an impetus in American archaeology for dialogue and debate on how to make CRM projects and programs yield both better archaeology and better public policy. Contributors: Pat Barker, Sarah T. Bridges, Susan M. Chandler, David Colin Crass, Hester A. Davis, T. J. Ferguson, Julia A. King, William D. Lipe, Douglas P. Mackey, Lynne Sebastian “Archaeology & Cultural Resource Management is a very important work that looks at the issues facing CRM Archaeology and does something that is rarely seen—offers solutions. I am confident that this book…will [prove] to be very influential in shaping the future of CRM Archaeology.”—J. W. Joseph, New South Associates “Archaeology and Cultural Resource Management challenges applied and academic archaeologists to deserve the trust and support of the public through high-quality research, visionary policies, and innovative outreach.”—Sarah Herr, American Anthropologist CONTENTS 1. The Future of CRM Archaeology 2. Archaeologists Looked to the Future in the Past 3. Archaeological Values and Reseource Management 4. The Processes Made Me Do It: Or, Would a Reasonably Intelligent Person Agree that CRM is Reasonably Intelligent? 5. Deciding What Matters: Archaeology, Eligibility, and Significance 6. Innovative Approaches to Mitigation 7. The Challenges of Dissemination: Accessing Archaeological Data and Interpretations 8. Improving the Quality of Archaeology in the United States through Consultation and Collaboration with Native Americans and Descendant Communities 9. Is the Same Old Thing Enough for Twenty-first Century CRM? Keeping CRM Archaeology Relevant in a New Millennnium 10. Archaeology and Ethics: Is There a Shared Vision for the Future? 11. The Crisis in Communication: Still with Us? 12. Perspectives from the Advanced Seminar 6 888-390-6070 The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon An Eleventh-Century Pueblo Regional Center Edited by Stephen H. Lekson 2006. 560 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, timeline, appendices, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-48-0, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series The site of a great Ancestral Pueblo center in the eleventh and twelfth centuries AD, the ruins in Chaco Canyon look like a city to some archaeologists, a ceremonial center to others. Chaco and the people who created its monumental great houses, extensive roads, and network of outlying settlements remain an enigma in American archaeology. Two decades after the latest and largest program of field research at Chaco (the National Park Service’s Chaco Project from 1971 to 1982) the original researchers and other leading Chaco scholars convened to evaluate what they now know about Chaco in light of new theories and new data.Those meetings culminated in an advanced seminar at SAR, where the Chaco Project itself was born in 1968. In this capstone volume, the contributors address central archaeological themes, including environment, organization of production, architecture, regional issues, and society and polity. They place Chaco in its time and in its region, considering what came before and after its heyday and its neighbors to the north and south, including Mesoamerica. Contributors: Nancy J. Akins, Linda Cordell, Jeffrey S. Dean, Andrew I. Duff, W. Derek Hamilton, W. James Judge, John W. Kantner, Keith W. Kintigh, Stephen H. Lekson, William D. Lipe, Peter J. McKenna, Ben A. Nelson, Lynne Sebastian, Mollie S. Toll, H. Wolcott Toll, Ruth M. Van Dyke, R. Gwinn Vivian, Carla R. VanWest, Richard H. Wilshusen, Thomas C. Windes “This is a landmark book. It synthesizes the results of the last great archaeological project that may ever be conducted in Chaco Canyon.” —Barbara J. Mills, American Anthropologist “In 12 chapters, 20 authors treat major themes to explain the extraordinary Chaco phenomenon. It is an impressive accomplishment, clearly written and carefully edited, with good maps and illustrations. Highly recommended for general archaeology collections.” —K. A. Dixon, Choice ARCHAEOLOGY RECENTLY PUBLISHED! An Archaeology of Doings Secularism and the Study of Pueblo Religion I N T H E AMERICAS Severin M. Fowles Archaeology of the Grand Canyon 2013. 324 pp., figures, maps, table, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-56-4, $34.95 There is an unsettling paradox in the anthropology of religion. Modern understandings of “religion” emerged out of a specifically Western genealogy, and recognizing this, many anthropologists have become deeply suspicious of claims that such understandings can be applied with fidelity to premodern or non-Western contexts. And yet, archaeologists now write about “religion” and “ritual” with greater ease than ever, even though their deeply premodern and fully non-Western objects of study would seem to make the use of these concepts especially fraught. In this probing study, Severin Fowles challenges us to consider just what is at stake in archaeological reconstructions of an enchanted past. Focusing on the Ancestral Pueblo societies of the American Southwest, he provocatively argues that the Pueblos—prior to missionization—did not have a religion at all, but rather something else, something glossed in the indigenous vernacular as “doings.” Fowles then outlines a new archaeology of doings that takes us far beyond the familiar terrain of premodern religion. “An Archaeology of Doings provides a landmark contribution to the archaeology of religion and charts a course through which archaeology might bring its unique insights to the modern world.” —Scott Ortman, Omidyar Fellow, Santa Fe Institute “This is a brilliant book that should be read by all anthropologists interested in understanding religion. It is simultaneously a fascinating history of Euro-Pueblo relations, a penetrating critique of our ontological categories, and a compelling argument that we have never really understood how non-Westerners understand the world.” —John Robb, University of Cambridge “An Archaeology of Doings offers a brilliant reinterpretation of the Northern Tiwa archaeological record and a profound intervention into current interdisciplinary debates around anthropological method, the study of religion, and the problematics of secularism. Fowles shows us how persistent tropes about nonmodern ‘religion’ reinforce secularism’s accounts of its own inevitablility, and he demonstrates the value of indigenous categories, not just as a way out of the scholarly conundrums of ‘religion,’ but as a significant improvement in the way we understand human cultures across time.” —Tisa Wenger, Yale University The Bright Angel Site Edited by Douglas W. Schwartz, Michael P. Marshall, and Jane Kepp 1979. 124 pp., figures, map, tables, appendices, references, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-00-8, $12.00 Grand Canyon Series Archaeology of the Grand Canyon Unkar Delta Douglas W. Schwartz, Richard C. Chapman, and Jane Kepp 1980. 422 pp., figures, maps, tables, appendices, references, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-04-6, $20.00 Grand Canyon Series Archaeology of the Grand Canyon The Walhalla Plateau Douglas W. Schwartz, Jane Kepp, and Richard C. Chapman 1979. 170 pp., figures, maps, tables, appendices, references, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-06-0, $16.00 Grand Canyon Series www.sarpress.org 7 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS The Architecture of Arroyo Hondo Pueblo, New Mexico Winifred Creamer 1993. 240 pp., figures, map, tables, references, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-35-0, $35.00 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 7 The Arroyo Hondo New Mexico Site Survey Prehistoric Pueblo Settlement Patterns D. Bruce Dickson Jr. 1979. 152 pp., figures, maps, tables, appendices, notes, references, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-02-2, $12.00 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 2 Chaco & Hohokam Prehistoric Regional Systems in the American Southwest Edited by Patricia L. Crown and W. James Judge 1991. 388 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6x9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-76-3, $19.95 Advanced Seminar Series 8 888-390-6070 The Chaco Experience Landscape and Ideology at the Center Place Ruth M. Van Dyke 2008. 344 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-76-3, $34.95 Resident Scholar Series In a remote canyon in northwest New Mexico, thousandyear-old sandstone walls shimmer in the sunlight, stretching like ancient vertebrae against a turquoise sky. This storied place—Chaco Canyon—carries multiple layers of meaning for Native Americans and archaeologists, writers and tourists, explorers and artists. Here, isolation, the arid climate, and dry-laid construction have preserved ruins that are monuments to prehistoric creativity and perseverance. Chaco Canyon draws its power not only from the ancient architecture sheltered beneath its walls but also from the ever-changing light and the far-flung vistas of the Colorado Plateau. Light and shadow, stone and sky come together in the canyon. At the heart of this sky-filled landscape lie twelve massive great houses. The Chacoan landscape, with its formally constructed, carefully situated architectural features, is charged with symbolism. In this volume, archaeologist Ruth M. Van Dyke analyzes the meanings and experience of moving through this landscape to illuminate Chacoan beliefs and social relationships. “Van Dyke selects a phenomenological approach to landscape that directs her to visibility, movement, memory, and cosmology. Her field methods included walking miles of ancient Chacoan roads.… Van Dyke’s descriptions of these walks, what she noticed and felt, augmented by her color photographs, are fascinating.” —Linda Cordell, Journal of Field Archaeology “It has been difficult to suggest a good first book for those interested in diving into Chaco Canyon the place, the ancient phenomenon, and the object of archaeological scrutiny. Much of the literature on Chaco assumes substantial background knowledge, and many works are clearly written for those already initiated into Chaco-arcana. In this context, Ruth Van Dyke’s concise, non-technical, and well-written book stands out as an exception. Van Dyke’s book is neither an introductory text nor a survey of the literature. The author has a definite perspective on Chaco and seeks to expand the range of evidence used to interpret the place. At the same time, the author presents a good summary of the Chacoan archaeological record, takes few shortcuts in introducing the range of perspectives on the Chaco phenomenon, and cites most of the relevant literature. The result is a book that works just as well as a first book on Chaco as it does as a book with specific points to make about Chaco and about archaeological practive in general.” —Scott Ortman, Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, H-Net Reviews The Contemporary Ecology of Arroyo Hondo, New Mexico N. Edmund Kelley 1980. 160 pp., figures, maps, tables, appendices, references, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-01-5, $14.95 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 1 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS Enduring Conquests Rethinking the Archaeology of Resistance to Spanish Colonialism in the Americas Edited by Matthew Liebmann and Melissa S. Murphy 2011. 344 pp., figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-41-0, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Copán The History of an Ancient Maya Kingdom Edited by E. Wyllys Andrews and William L. Fash 2005. 512 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-38-1, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Cowboys & Cave Dwellers Basketmaker Archaeology in Utah’s Grand Gulch Fred M. Blackburn and Ray A. Williamson 1997. 196 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, maps, chronology, notes, references, index, 7 3/4 x 10 3/4 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-48-0, $32.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-47-3, $27.95 Signed copies available Enduring Conquests presents new interpretations of Native American experiences under Spanish colonialism and challenges the reader to reexamine long-standing assumptions about the Spanish conquests of the Americas. The contributors to this volume reject the grand narrative that views this era as a clash of civilizations— a narrative produced centuries after the fact—to construct more comprehensive and complex social histories of Native American life after 1492 by employing the perspective of archaeology and focusing explicitly on the native side of the colonial equation. Contributors: Robin A. Beck Jr., Kira Blaisdell-Sloan, Thomas H. Charlton, Minette C. Church, Guillermo Cock, Kathleen Deagan, Jennifer L. Dornan, Patricia Fournier, Elena Goycochea, Rosemary A. Joyce, Matthew Liebmann, David G. Moore, Melissa S. Murphy, Robert W. Preucel, Jeffrey Quilter, Christopher B. Rodning, Russell N. Sheptak, Barbara L. Voss, Steven A. Wernke, Jason Yaeger “Spanish colonial institutions of church and state, often simplistically represented in historic literature as either glorious or exceptionally cruel, were variously resisted or accepted but always endured by subaltern peoples who were themselves racially and culturally diverse. This volume brings a critical archaeological perspective to the material record of reactions and resistance of colonial subjects. While resistance to Spanish conquests and Spanish colonial policy is a starting point, interpreting resistance constitutes a problem the contributors investigate. The engaging and richly textured case studies are written by leaders in the field. Drawn from North, Central, and South America, they facilitate comparison and offer insights into the complex behaviors and beliefs that were basic to Spanish colonial experiences and that continue to resonate in twenty-first century hemispheric political dynamics. Enduring Conquests is at once a thoughtful and provocative discussion and a valuable scholarly resource.”—Linda Cordell, Professor Emerita, University of Colorado “In Enduring Conquests, Matt Liebmann and Melissa Murphy assemble a sparkling, first-string lineup of scholars who take us far beyond the bloody battlefields and the documentary accounts of the Spanish conquests of the Americas. The contributors explore the patchwork of material culture consequences, harnessing a host of innovative archaeological techniques and theoretical perspectives to lay bare the stark and sometimes grisly realities of native resistance and pushback by colonists from afar.” —David Hurst Thomas, American Museum of Natural History “Enduring Conquests is a welcome addition to the nascent literature on Pan-American historical archaeology.... Rethinking of the archaeology of resistance has been valuable because it encourages us to think in more nuanced ways. At the same time, we should not let variability overshadow the overall pattern of fundamental differentials in power created by colonialism that are legacies that last to today. This volume captures two senses of enduring conquests: the lasting legacy of inequalities and the creativity, ability, and staying power of indigenous peoples.” —Kathryn Sampeck, Anthropos www.sarpress.org 9 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS The Faunal Remains from Arroyo Hondo Pueblo, New Mexico A Study in Short-term Subsistence Change Richard W. Lang and Arthur H. Harris 1984. 340 pp., figures, maps, tables, appendices, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-09-1, $18.00 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 5 Food, Diet, and Population at Prehistoric Arroyo Hondo Pueblo, New Mexico Wilma Wetterstrom 1986. 324 pp., figures, tables, appendices, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-16-9, $17.00 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 6 2009 New Mexico Book Awards, Anthropology/Archaeology/Science Winner 2008 ForeWord Reviews Book of the Year Award, Finalist The Great Basin People and Place in Ancient Times Edited by Catherine S. Fowler and Don D. Fowler 2008. 196 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, maps, reading list, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-95-4, $59.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-96-1, $24.95 Popular Archaeology Series This book is about a place, the Great Basin of western North America, and the Native American people who lived there during the past thirteen thousand years. The authors highlight the ingenious solutions people devised to sustain themselves in a difficult environment. The Great Basin is a semiarid and often harsh land, but one with life-giving oases. As the weather fluctuated from year to year, and the climate from decade to decade or even from one millennium to the next, the availability of water, plants, and animals also fluctuated. Only people who learned the land intimately and read the many signs of its changing moods were successful. The evidence of their success is often subtle and difficult to interpret from the few and fragile remains left behind for archaeologists to discover. These ancient fragments of food and baskets, hats and hunting decoys, traps and rock art, and the lifeways they reflect are the subject of this wellillustrated book. Contributors: J. M. Adovasio, Richard V.N. Ahlstrom, C. Melvin Aikens, Pat Barker, Charlotte Beck, Robert L. Bettinger, Tom Connolly, Robert Elston, Catherine S. Fowler, Don D. Fowler, Ted Goebel, Kelly Graf, Donald K. Grayson, Eugene M. Hattori, Bryan Hockett, Joel C. Janetski, Edward A. Jolie, Ruth Burgett Jolie, George T. Jones, Robert L. Kelly, Duncan Metcalfe, David B. Madsen, Angus R. Quinlan, David Rhode, Heidi Roberts, Polly Schaafsma, Steven R. Simms, David Hurst Thomas, Alanah Woody “Catherine and Don Fowlers’ edited volume offers 19 short chapters by knowledgeable researchers about how people lived in this challenging environment. The topics range from the region’s paleo-environments and its early peopling, to the Archaic period, to the Fremont culture and their rock art. While focusing on archaeology, many of the authors use ethnology to flesh out their interpretations of the uses and meanings of Great Basin artifacts and landscapes. The book contains gorgeous color photos and excellent maps and illustrations.” —Tamara Stewart, American Archaeology “By today’s foremost authorities on Great Basin archaeology.... This is a handsome publication, with lovely maps, 25 beautiful color plates of textiles, rock art, and landscapes.” —Amy J. Gilreath, California Archaeology Great Excavations Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888–1939 Melinda Elliott 1995. 270 pp., black-and-white photos, map, notes, bibliography, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-43-5, $19.95 Signed copies available 10 888-390-6070 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS 2013 New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards, Finalist 2012 Southwest Books of the Year, Best Reading Hisat’sinom Ancient Peoples in a Land Without Water Edited by Christian E. Downum 2012. 196 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, maps, reading list, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-934691-11-3, $59.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-12-0, $24.95 Popular Archaeology Series The national monuments of Wupatki, Walnut Canyon, and Montezuma’s Castle showcase the treasures of the first people who settled and developed farms, towns, and trade routes throughout northern Arizona and beyond. Hopis call these ancient peoples Hisat’sinom, and Spanish explorers named their hard, arid homeland the sierra sin agua, mountains without water. Indeed, much of the region receives less annual precipitation than the quintessential desert city of Tucson. In Hisat’sinom, archaeologists explain how the people of this region flourished, despite living in a place with very little water and extremes of heat and cold. Exploiting the mulching properties of volcanic cinders blasted out of Sunset Crater, the Hisat’sinom grew corn and cotton, made and traded fine cotton cloth and decorated ceramics, and imported exotic goods like turquoise and macaws from hundreds—even thousands—of miles away. From clues as small as the tiny fingerprints left on children’s toys, postholes in the floors of old houses, and widely scattered corn fields, archaeologists have pieced together an intriguing portrait of what childhood was like, the importance of weaving cotton cloth, and how farmers managed risk in a harsh environment. At its peak in the late 1100s, Wupatki stood as the region’s largest and tallest town, a cultural center for people throughout the surrounding region. It was a gathering place, a trading center, a treasury of exotic goods, a landmark, and a place of sacred ritual and ceremony. Then, after 1200, people moved away and the pueblo sank into ruin. Contributors: Lyle Balenquah, Ellen Brennan, Gregory B. Brown, Jeffrey S. Dean, Christian E. Downum, Mark D. Elson, Lisa Folb, Daniel Garcia, Kelley Hays-Gilpin, Saul L. Hedquist, Phyllis Hogan. James P. Holmlund, Kathyrn Kamp, Stewart B. Koyiyumptewa, Leigh J. Kuwanwisiwma, Ruth E. Lambert, Lloyd Masayumptewa, Michael J. Novotny, F. Michael O’Hara, Michael H. Ort, Anita Poleahla, Jeanne Stevens Schofer, Francis E. Smiley, Donald E. Weaver Jr., John C. Whittaker “A superb summary of the deep Native history in the area around Flagstaff, Arizona—the archaeological Sinagua region. What a lively history it was: volcanic eruptions; Chaco-meets-Hohokam geopolitics; violence on the frontiers! And, of course, families, clans, and villages that survived and even thrived amid alarms and excursions. This strikingly-illustrated volume is the ‘go-to’ resource for Sinagua. Leading researchers present their recent discoveries and new syntheses of past work. Insightful chapters by Native scholars remind us that the story continues today at the pueblos of the Hopi Tribe.” —Stephen H. Lekson, author of A History of the Ancient Southwest (SAR Press) “For anyone with an interest in southwestern prehistory, the eloquently written Hisat’sinom is a must read. It connects the past to the present by offering multiple voices and perspectives that illustrate the varied meanings, interpretations, and values surrounding this archaeologically rich region.”—Wolf Gumerman, University Honors Program, Northern Arizona University “The history of the Native Americans who long ago lived around Arizona’s Sunset Crater and the Verde Valley have fascinated, and sometimes puzzled, generations of researchers and casual visitors. We are most fortunate now to have an authoritative book that general readers can enjoy, which explains what is currently known about the life and culture of these ancient peoples.” —David Grant Noble, author of Ancient Colorado: An Archaeological Perspective and In the Places of the Spirits (SAR Press) www.sarpress.org 11 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS BEST SELLER! 2010 New Mexico Book Awards, Anthropology/Archaeology/Science Winner 2010 Southwest Books of the Year, Panelist Pick A History of the Ancient Southwest Stephen H. Lekson 2009. 452 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-10-6, $39.95 According to archaeologist Stephen H. Lekson, much of what we think we know about the Southwest has been compressed into conventions and classifications and orthodoxies. This book challenges and reconfigures these accepted notions by telling two parallel stories, one about the development, personalities, and institutions of Southwestern archaeology and the other about interpretations of events in the ancient past. While many works would have us believe that nothing much ever happened in the ancient Southwest, Lekson argues that the region experienced rises and falls, kings and commoners, war and peace, triumphs and failures. In his view, Chaco Canyon was a geopolitical reaction to the “Colonial Period” Hohokam expansion, and the Hohokam “Classic Period” was the product of refugee Chacoan nobles, chased off the Colorado Plateau by angry farmers. Far to the south, Casas Grandes was a failed attempt to create a Mesoamerican state, and modern Pueblo people—with societies so different from those at Chaco and Casas Grandes—deliberately rejected these monumental, hierarchical episodes of their past. “In Southwestern archaeology, a mind like Steve Lekson’s comes along once in a generation. This is his magnum opus—a highwire act that strings hundreds of bold ideas into a dazzling new synthesis.”—David Roberts, author of In Search of the Old Ones “Stephen Lekson has written among the most provocative and forward-looking books in archaeology today.… If you’ve never read a Lekson book, start here. You’ll find an archaeology that doesn’t take itself too seriously, written with literary flair, wit, and a dash of sarcasm as only Lekson can.”—Timothy Pauketat, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 2008 Southwest Books of the Year, Panelist Pick The Hohokam Millennium Edited by Suzanne K. Fish and Paul R. Fish 2008. 168 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, maps, reading list, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-80-0, $59.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-81-7, $24.95 Popular Archaeology Series For a thousand years they flourished in the arid lands now part of Arizona. They built extensive waterworks, ballcourts, and platform mounds, made beautiful pottery and jewelry, and engaged in wide-ranging trade networks. Then, slowly, their civilization faded and transmuted into something no longer Hohokam. Are today’s Tohono O’odham their heirs or their conquerors? The mystery and the beauty of Hohokam civilization are the subjects of the chapters in this volume. 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, created their sophisticated pottery and textiles, built their irrigation system and the huge ballcourts and platform mounds, and much more. Contributors: Donald M. Bahr, James M. Bayman, Jeffrey J. Clark, Douglas B. Craig, Patricia L. Crown, J. Andrew Darling, William H. Doelle, David E. Doyel, Mark D. Elson, Paul R. Fish, Suzanne K. Fish, George J. Gumerman, Kathleen Henderson, Barnaby V. Lewis, Daniel Lopez, Randall H. McGuire, John C. Ravesloot, Elisa Villalpando C., Henry D. Wallace, Stephanie M. Whittlesey “This edited volume provides an in-depth look into the history of one of the most intriguing and diverse societies in the prehispanic Southwest: the Hohokam…. Written in an easily accessible style, this book is ideal for academic as well as avocational perusal.”—SMRC Revista “The word huhugam means something that is all gone, such as food or when something disappears. Huhugam is used to refer to those people who have disappeared. Who really knows who they were or what happened to them? Did they really all die off, as some theories say, or did all or some of them remain to be the forefathers of the modern-day Tohono O’odham? Today we are here, the Tohono O’odham, and we do not know how far our past generations go back in time. We just say that we go back to the Huhugam. We are here today, but we know that some time in the future we will also be called the Huhugam.”—Daniel Lopez, Tohono O’odham Community College 12 888-390-6070 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS Ideology and Pre-Columbian Civilizations Edited by Arthur A. Demarest and Geoffrey W. Conrad 1992. 280 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-83-1, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series In Search of Chaco New Approaches to an Archaeological Enigma Edited by David Grant Noble 2004. 168 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, maps, reading list, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-54-1, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-42-8, $24.95 Popular Archaeology Series COMING SOON! Pre-order this book now. Medieval Mississippians The Cahokian World Edited by Timothy R. Pauketat and Susan M. Alt The eighth volume in the award-winning Popular Archaeology Series introduces a key historical period in pre-Columbian eastern North America —the “Mississippian” era—via a series of colorful essays on places, practices, and peoples written from Native American and non-Native perspectives on the past. The volume lays out the basic contours of the early centuries of this era (AD 1000–1300) in the Mississippian heartland, making connections to later centuries and contemporary peoples. Cahokia the place and Cahokian social history undergird the book, but Mississippian material cultures, landscapes, and descendants are highlighted, presenting a balanced, colorful, and accessible view of the Mississippian world. Contributors: Susan M. Alt, Danielle Benden, Robert Boszhardt, Charles Cobb, Robert Cook, Ann M. Early, Thomas E. Emerson, Michael G. Farkas, Brad Koldehoff, William Limp, Chloris Lowe Jr., Timothy R. Pauketat, Staffan Peterson, Donna J. Rausch, William F. Romain, Vincas P. Steponaitis, Amber Vanderwarker, Carrie Wilson, Greg Wilson, Thomas Zych 2007 New Mexico Book Awards, Finalist FORTHCOMING in the Popular Archaeology Series Coastal California The Mesa Verde World Explorations in Ancestral Pueblo Archaeology Edited by David Grant Noble A Land of Diversity Edited by Lynn Gamble The Middle San Juan Edited by Paul Reed and Gary Brown 2006. 182 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, maps, reading list, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-75-6, $24.95 Popular Archaeology Series www.sarpress.org 13 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS 2011 New Mexico Book Awards, Anthropology/Archaeology Winner Mimbres Lives and Landscapes Edited by Margaret C. Nelson and Michelle Hegmon 2010. 156 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, maps, reading list, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-934691-23-6, $59.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-24-3, $24.95 Popular Archaeology Series People have called the mountains, rolling hills, wide valleys, and broad desert plains of southwestern New Mexico home for at least ten thousand years. When they began to farm a little more than two thousand years ago, they settled near the rich soils in the river floodplains. Then, around 900 CE, the people of this region burned all of their kivas and started gathering in large villages with small ritual spaces and open plazas. Between about 900 and 1100 CE, they also made the intricately painted geometric and figurative bowls in a style that is today called Mimbres, their best-known legacy. In the 1130s they stopped making this kind of pottery and drifted out of villages to more dispersed settlements. These dramatic changes frame the story told in Mimbres Lives and Landscapes. The well-illustrated essays in this book offer the latest archaeological research to explain what we know and what questions still remain about the ancient people of this region. Beginning with an overview of the abrupt change in lifestyle that launched the distinctive Mimbres culture, the book explores the lives of men and women, their sustenance, the changing nature of leadership, and the possible meanings of their dramatic pottery designs. Contributors: Roger Anyon, Darrell Creel, Patricia A. Gilman, Kelley Hays-Gilpin, Michelle Hegmon, Steven LeBlanc, Paul E. Minnis, Marit K. Munson, Ben A. Nelson, Margaret C. Nelson, Steve Northup, Jonathan Sandor, Karen Gust Schollmeyer, Harry J. Shafer “In the eleventh century, Native American people living in the Mimbres region of southwestern New Mexico painted spectacular geometric and figurative designs in black and white on pottery that captivates and inspires people around the world today. This book explores the physical, social, and ideological lives of the people of the Mimbres region through current and ongoing archaeological research. Mimbres Lives and Landscapes is engaging, readable, and comprehensive. The authors, who are experts in the field, invite you to explore the lives of the people whose pottery we so admire and provoke you to think about the ways they constructed and changed their world. The book is a visual and intellectual delight.”—Linda Cordell, National Academy of Sciences and American Academy of Arts and Sciences “In this well-written and beautifully illustrated book, the latest results of archaeological research provide a cultural, environmental, and historical context for the remarkable achievements of the Classic Mimbres artists. Nelson and Hegmon are to be congratulated for bringing together leading researchers to produce a top-flight synthesis of current knowledge of the Mimbres tradition. This book will be of great value to archaeologists and non-archaeologists alike.”—Bill Lipe, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, Washington State University Navajos in the Catholic Church Records of New Mexico, 1694–1875 David M. Brugge 2010. 208 pp., figures, tables, appendices, bibliography, 5 1/2 x 8 1/4 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-39-7, $20.00 In the past, the history of many Indian nations was murky and dim, written in large part by outsiders unfamiliar with the peoples and their cultures. Though that has changed today as Native peoples have increasingly written their own comprehensive and insightful histories, there still remains the need for an impartial analysis such as this history of the Diné (Navajo) written by David M. Brugge in 1968 (first published by the Navajo Tribe and with a second printing in 1985 by Navajo Community College Press). Combining archaeological evidence with Navajo cultural precepts, Brugge has used the records of the oldest European institution in the American Southwest—the Catholic Church—to shed light on the practices, causes, and effects of Spanish, Mexican, and American occupation on the Navajo Nation. 14 888-390-6070 On the Edge of Splendor Exploring Grand Canyon’s Human Past Douglas W. Schwartz 1989. 80 pp., color photographs, black-andwhite illustrations, maps, 8 1/2 x 11 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-30-5, $12.95 Grand Canyon Series ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS 2007 New Mexico Book Awards, Best New Mexico History Book The Peopling of Bandelier Opening Archaeology New Insights from the Archaeology of the Pajarito Plateau Repatriation’s Impact on Contemporary Research and Practice Edited by Thomas W. Killion 2008. 288 pp., figure, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-93-0, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series In 1989–90, Congress enacted two laws, the National Museum of the American Indian Act and the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, that required museums and other repositories of Native American human remains and cultural items to consult with, share information about, and return some items to federally recognized Indian tribes and to Native Alaskan and Hawaiian communities. What effects have these laws had on anthropological practice, theory, and education in the United States? In 2004–2005, SAR and the Society for Applied Anthropology gathered together a group of anthropological archaeologists to address this question. This volume presents their conclusions and urges a continuing and increasing cooperation between anthropologists and indigenous peoples. Contributors: Tamara L. Bray, Kathleen Fine-Dare, Ann M. Kakaliouras, Thomas W. Killion, Keith W. Kintigh, Dorothy Lippert, Stephen Loring, Darby C. Stapp, David Hurst Thomas, Joe Watkins, Larry J. Zimmerman “This thought-provoking collection of essays draws scholarly attention to one of the unintended consequences of repatriation, that is, how NAGPRA and the NMAI Act have increased interaction with Native Americans in a positive manner that is significantly changing archaeological method, theory, and practice.” —T. J. Ferguson, University of Arizona “This is an excellent collection...on the controversies that have rocked archaeology over the past fifteen years.... A perfect textbook for introducing students to the history of ethical controversies.”—Anne Pyburn, University of Indiana Edited by Robert P. Powers 2005. 176 pp., color plates, black-andwhite illustrations, maps, reading list, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-53-4, $24.95 Popular Archaeology Series The Pottery from Arroyo Hondo Pueblo, New Mexico Tribalization and Trade in the Northern Rio Grande Judith A. Habicht-Mauche 1993. 280 pp., figures, map, tables, references, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-34-3, $35.00 Arroyo Hondo Series,Volume 8 The Past Climate of Arroyo Hondo, New Mexico, Reconstructed from Tree Rings Martin R. Rose, Jeffrey S. Dean, and William J. Robinson 1983. 144 pp., figures, map, tables, addendum, references, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-05-3, $14.95 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 4 www.sarpress.org 15 ARCHAEOLOGY I N T H E AMERICAS Pueblo Population and Society Tikal: Dynasties, Foreigners, & Affairs of State The Arroyo Hondo Skeletal and Mortuary Remains Advancing Maya Archaeology Ann M. Palkovich Edited by Jeremy A. Sabloff 1980. 224 pp., figures, maps, tables, appendices, references, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-03-9, $14.95 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 3 A Space Syntax Analysis of Arroyo Hondo Pueblo, New Mexico Community Formation in the Northern Rio Grande Jason S. Shapiro 2005. 200 pp., figures, tables, appendices, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-59-6, $24.95 Arroyo Hondo Series, Volume 9 Themes in Southwest Prehistory Edited by George J. Gumerman 1994. 350 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6x9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-84-8, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series 16 888-390-6070 2003. 448 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-22-0, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Women & Men in the Prehispanic Southwest Labor, Power, and Prestige Edited by Patricia L. Crown 2000. 520 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-74-9, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-17-6, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series 2007 Association of Latina and Latino Anthropologists Book Award, Winner Acequia Water Sharing, Sanctity, and Place CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL I S S U E S Sylvia Rodríguez 2006. 214 pp., black-and-white illustrations, notes, glossary, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-55-8, $27.95 Resident Scholar Series “Rodríguez fills an important gap in the historical and anthropological literature on agroecology and irrigation. Rodríguez’s extensive ethnographic fieldwork, coupled with her experience growing up parciante, gives the reader a unique glimpse into this cultural phenomenon that only the author could provide.” —Henry F. Lyle III, Southwestern American Literature Ambos Nogales Intimate Portraits of the U.S.-Mexico Border Photographs by Maeve Hickey Text by Lawrence Taylor 2002. 144 pp., duotone photos, 8 1/2 x 9 1/4 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-07-7, $17.95 Resident Scholar Series Course use suggestions online at www.sarpress.org American Arrivals Anthropology Engages the New Immigration Edited by Nancy Foner 2003. 384 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-33-6, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-34-3, $19.95 Advanced Seminar Series COMING SOON! Pre-order this book now. Cash on the Table Markets, Values, and Moral Economies Edited by Edward F. Fischer 2013. Paper, ISBN 978-1-938645-00-6 E-book, ISBN 978-1-938645-07-5 A great deal is at stake in understanding the moral dimensions of economic behavior and markets. Public debates over executive compensation, the fair trade movement, and recent academic inquiries into the limitations of rational-choice paradigms all point to the relevance of moral values in our economic decision-making processes. Moral values inform economic behavior. On its face, this proposition is unassailable. Think of the often spiritual appeal of consumer goods or the value-laden stakes of upward or downward mobility. Consider the central role that moral questions regarding poverty, access to health care, the tax code, property and land rights, and corruption play in the shaping of modern governments, societies, and social movements. Ponder the meaning of fair trade coffee and organic produce as well as Walmart’s everyday low prices. The moral aspects of the marketplace have never been so contentious or consequential; however, the realm of economics is often treated as a world unto itself, a domain where human behavior is guided not by emotions, beliefs, moralities, or the passions that fascinate anthropologists but by the hard fact of rational choices. Anthropologists have historically tended to focus on the corrosive effects of markets on traditional lifeways and the ways in which global markets disadvantage marginalized peoples. Economists often have difficulty recognizing that markets are embedded in particular social and political power structures and that “free” market transactions are often less free than we might think. If anthropologists could view markets a bit more ecumenically and if economists could view them a bit more politically, then great value—cash on the table—could be found in bringing these perspectives together. Contributors: Peter Benson, João Biehl, Avery Dickins de Girón, James Ferguson, Edward F. Fischer, Robert H. Frank, Jonathan Friedman, Matthew Grimes, Stephen Gudeman, Stuart Kirsch, Deirdre N. McCloskey, Natasha Schüll, Jonathan A. Shayne, Jesse Sullivan, Anna Tsing, Bart Victor, Caitlin Zaloom www.sarpress.org 17 CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL I S S U E S Confronting Cancer Metaphors, Advocacy, and Anthropology Catastrophe & Culture The Anthropology of Disaster Edited by Susanna M. Hoffman and Anthony Oliver-Smith 2002. 328 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-15-2, $19.95 Advanced Seminar Series Community Building in the Twenty-First Century Edited by Stanley E. Hyland 2005. 304 pp., figures, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-61-9, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-62-6, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Edited by Juliet McMullin and Diane Weiner 2009. 300 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-09-0, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series The World Health Organization (WHO) reported more than 7 million deaths from cancer—2.5 percent of all deaths—in 2005. Each year there are approximately 11 million new cases, and WHO expects the number to double by 2020. Although the disease is not uncommon in rich nations, 70 percent of cancer deaths occur in low- and middleincome regions and countries. The growing frequency of the disease reinforces its significance as a metaphor for lack of control and degeneration and as a signifier of difference, something that is part of one’s body and the world and yet completely unacceptable. In this book, anthropologists examine the experiences of individuals confronting cancer and reveal the social context in which prevention and treatment may succeed or fail. Contributors: Leo R. Chavez, Deborah O. Erwin, Suzanne Heurtin-Roberts, Marjorie Kagawa-Singer, Anastasia Karakasidou, Simon J. Craddock Lee, Holly F. Mathews, Juliet McMullin, Paul Stoller, Diane Weiner “Confronting Cancer offers a highly engaging examination of the anthropology of cancer.… Authored by many of the leading figures in the field, this edited volume moves beyond examination to action, documenting the application of anthropological approaches and insights in the alleviation of suffering among people living with cancer. Thus [the book] exhibits the best of anthropology in its confrontation with the worst of human conditions.” —Merrill Singer, University of Connecticut “The contributors in Confronting Cancer...ask us to re-examine our stale assumptions and misuse of such concepts as culture, health disparities, and multiculturalism. The book is both timely and relevant for students, researchers, and practitioners who want to help those who feel powerless or misunderstood when confronted by cancer.” —Jennie Joe, University of Arizona “This stimulating book challenges the oncology professional's viewpoint on the real meaning behind the provision of culturally competent healthcare. The goals of this book...are threefold: 1. to examine the metaphors of cancer that teach us about our differences; 2. to delineate metaphors that naturalize inequalities; and 3. to contribute to the alleviation of suffering associated with cancer while exposing those perspectives that seek to homogenize diversity.... The contributing authors in Confronting Cancer engage the professional to examine the anthropology of cancer and the application of concepts such as cultural competence, health disparities, and the complexity of diversity within cultural groups.”—Nancy Jo Bush, Oncology Nursing Forum 18 888-390-6070 CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL I S S U E S Dangerous Liaisons Anthropologists and the National Security State Edited by Laura A. McNamara and Robert A. Rubinstein 2011. 296 pp., figures, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-49-6, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Dangerous Liaisons is a book about intersections. It is a product of two years’ worth of discussions among a group of ethnographers from four different countries with a variety of experiences studying war, violence, the military, and the state. In some ways this book is distinctly a product of our times due to the terrorist attacks on American embassies in Tanzania and Kenya, the later attack on the United States on September 11, 2001, the United States’ declaration of a Global War on Terror, and the subsequent invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Throughout the first decade of the new century anthropologists have watched with both interest and concern as government agencies—particularly those with military and intelligence functions—have sought their professional assistance in understanding terrorists’ motivations, stabilizing nascent wartime governments, and countering insurgencies. Dangerous Liaisons also explores long-standing tensions in anthropology regarding the discipline’s relationship to the state. This challenge is hardly unique to anthropology: knowledge underwrites power, which is why governments invest in research, seek the consultation of scientists, and create bureaus and functions to house and deploy expert resources. As a result, scientists have come to rely heavily on government support for research and development activities. Contributors: Eyal Ben-Ari, R. Brian Ferguson, Douglas P. Fry, Danny Hoffman, Anne Irwin, Laura A. McNamara, David Price, Robert A. Rubinstein, Maren Tomforde Democracy Anthropological Approaches Edited by Julia Paley 2008. 280 pp., notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-07-6, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series In recent decades, powerful institutions have packaged Western democracy for export around the globe. Although Western democracy is grounded in specific historical experiences and cultural assumptions, advocates have generally taken its normative status for granted. So, too, have most academics. Yet if democracy is broadly understood as government by “the people,” it must necessarily differ according to “the people” in question. Just what “the will of the people” is and how it might be realized become questions of pressing importance. Rather than advance alternative definitions of democracy, celebrate alternative democracies, or posit alternatives to democracy, the contributors to this volume focus on the ways specific definitions of democracy are advanced and others eclipsed, and how certain claims to represent “the will of the people” gain currency as others are silenced. While scholars of democracy have proposed one definitive model after another, the authors suggest that democracy is by nature an open-ended set of questions about the workings of power—questions best engaged through the dialogical processes of fieldwork and ethnographic writing. Contributors: Mukulika Banerjee, Kimberley Coles, Carol J. Greenhouse, Akhil Gupta, David Nugent, Julia Paley, Jennifer Schirmer, Harry G. West “What do anthropologists have to add to the understanding of democracy, perhaps the most taken for granted, overused term in our political lexicon? A great deal, as it turns out, much of it subversive of received wisdom. This volume does a highly impressive job of interrogating what the term actually means in different contexts, how democracy is conceptualized and practiced in different times and places, and why we ought to relinquish many of our preconceptions about it. A major achievement, this, in the critical study of politics.” —John Comaroff, University of Chicago www.sarpress.org 19 CONTEMPORARY Forces of Compassion SOCIAL Humanitarianism Between Ethics and Politics I S S U E S Development & Dispossession The Crisis of Forced Displacement and Resettlement Edited by Anthony Oliver-Smith 2009. 344 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-08-3, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Capital-intensive, high-technology, large-scale projects compel the displacement and resettlement of an estimated 15 million people every year in the process of converting farmlands, fishing grounds, forests, and homes into reservoirs, irrigation systems, mines, plantations, colonization projects, highways, urban renewal zones, industrial complexes, and tourist resorts. Aimed at generating economic growth and strengthening the region or nation, these projects have all too often left local people permanently displaced, disempowered, and destitute. Because there can be no return to land submerged under a dam-created lake or to a neighborhood buried under a stadium or throughway, the solutions displaced people need must be durable. The contributors to this volume analyze the failures of existing resettlement policies and propose just such solutions. Contributors: Gregory V. Button, Michael M. Cernea, Dana Clark, Chris de Wet, Theodore E. Downing, William F. Fisher, Carmen Garcia-Downing, Barbara Rose Johnston, Satish Kedia, Dolores Koenig,Anthony Oliver-Smith, Thayer Scudder “This is a fantastic book, well researched and written, covering a broad range of topics…. Each of the authors constructively points to steps to be taken, and even steps that have been taken, to make development-induced resettlement more sustainable and successful.” —Laura Hammond, School of Oriental and African Studies “An outstanding collection…[that] will meet a real need among scholars and practitioners in the fields of development studies, anthropology, and planning.” —Balakrishnan Rajagopal, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 20 888-390-6070 Edited by Erica Bornstein and Peter Redfield 2011. 320 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-40-3, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Suffering and charity have a long history. Both human sorrows and attempted remedies were familiar features of life in earlier eras and religious traditions; however, during the final decades of the twentieth century, natural disasters and civilian casualties of war transformed into “humanitarian crises.” In these recurring dramas presented by international media, an extensive network of interstate entities and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) supplies assistance to victims. The contemporary aid world is a mosaic of aid sectors, each skewed slightly toward a particular aspect of need and action. The development sector focuses on alleviating poverty, while the human rights sector aims to rectify identifiable wrongs. Humanitarianism directly addresses physical and psychological suffering. The contributors to Forces of Compassion examine this sector through the lens of anthropology, looking at dominant practices, tensions, and beliefs. Contributors: Jonathan Benthall, Erica Bornstein, Harri Englund, Didier Fassin, Ilana Feldman, Sandra Teresa Hyde, Mariella Pandolfi, Peter Redfield, Miriam Ticktin “Humanitarian action is now the mission of a large field of NGOs and attracts both the money and the moral indignation of millions. Yet social science has been slow to recognize the importance of humanitarianism and also to analyze its historical and cultural roots and particularities. Forces of Compassion is among the most important books yet published for those who want to go behind dramatic images and headlines to ask why the suffering of distant strangers is compelling, why response is organized in the specific ways it is, and what unintended consequences are bundled into humanitarian action.” —Craig Calhoun, President of the Social Science Research Council and University Professor of the Social Sciences at NYU “Forces of Compassion represents a remarkable contribution to the subject of contemporary humanitarianism, ethics, and our discipline of anthropology...and is suggestive of paths to take in facing the challenges of the twenty-first century.” —James Quesada, San Francisco State University “Timely, lively, eclectic, and insightful.” —Michael Barnett, George Washington University “This collection of essays, edited by Bornstein (anthropology, U. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee) and Redfield (anthropology, U. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill), examines the relatively recent transformation of war casualties into humanitarian crises. The contributors investigate humanitarianism from an anthropological viewpoint, considering common practices and political elements such as with nongovernmental organizations. The current heavy media coverage of humanitarian crises is in stark contrast to similar situations in human history, an element which is considered throughout the essays.” —SciTech Book News CONTEMPORARY RECENTLY PUBLISHED! The Futures of Our Pasts Ethical Implications of Collecting Antiquities in the Twenty-first Century Edited by Michael A. Adler and Susan Benton Bruning 2012. 136 pp., figures, table, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-54-0, $27.95 E-book, ISBN 978-1-938645-20-4, $27.95 Resident Scholar Series Ownership of “the past”—a concept invoking age-old struggles to possess and control ancient objects—is an essential theme in understanding our global cultural heritage. Beyond ownership, however, lies the need for stewardship: the responsibility to serve as custodians of ancient objects for the benefit of present and future generations. Peru is battling Yale University over artifacts from Machu Picchu, Italy is demanding the return of treasured objects from museums and collectors alike, and Native American tribes and other indigenous communities seek to reclaim important cultural items and rebury human remains and funerary objects taken from their lands. In the middle of this roiling debate over who has the right to collect and display antiquities, a group of scholars convened to discuss differing perspectives on the ethics of antiquities collecting. Contributors: Michael A. Adler, Alex W. Barker, Susan Benton Bruning, Emma C. Bunker, Torkom Demirjian, David Freidel, Patty Gerstenblith, John Henry Merryman, Michelle Rich, Donny George Youkhanna “The Futures of Our Pasts explores the finely nuanced margins that separate stewardship from ownership, provenience from provenance—key concepts when it comes to understanding the politicization of our collective history. By largely transcending legalities, this free-ranging interchange addresses the deeper ethical foundations of appropriate and inappropriate avenues of managing ancient cultural objects. Readers should expect little consensus here—beyond a universal condemnation of unrestrained looting and destruction, this is a conversation about still-contested ground. Does the world actually share a common human heritage populated by antiquities and other cultural objects from remote eras? Can (and should) global preservation initiatives transcend national boundaries and interests? The Futures of Our Pasts provides a timely and measured contribution to this increasingly shrill conversation.” —David Hurst Thomas, Curator of North American Archaeology, American Museum of Natural History “The Futures of Our Pasts tackles a timely and vitally important topic: the legal, ethical, social, and political dimensions of the antiquities market. Although this topic is buttressed by an extensive literature, all too often it is only one side speaking out (or against) the other. Not so with this balanced examination.” —Chip Colwell-Chanthaphonh, Curator of Anthropology, Denver Museum of Nature and Science SOCIAL I S S U E S Gray Areas Ethnographic Encounters with Nursing Home Culture Edited by Philip B. Stafford 2003. 336 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-31-2, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-30-5, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series 2007 New Mexico Book Awards, Finalist Half-Lives & Half-Truths Confronting the Radioactive Legacies of the Cold War Edited by Barbara Rose Johnston 2007. 336 pp., figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-82-4, $27.95 Signed copies available Resident Scholar Series Contributors: Holly Barker, Marie Boutté, Susan Dawson, Paula Garb, Hugh Gusterson, Barbara Rose Johnston, Joshua Levin, Edward Liebow, Gary Madsen, Laura Nader, David Price, Kathleen Purvis-Roberts, Theresa Satterfield, Edith Turner, Cynthia Werner “Half-Lives & Half-Truths is a timely, eye-opening, and galvanizing account of what we already know about the dangers of uranium mining, radiation, nuclear testing, and nuclear power production. In this era when we hear about Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the rising price of uranium, and rumors of the re-opening of U.S. uranium mines, it is important to understand the high price that miners, downwinders, the Marshall Islanders, and those who live near weapons facilities like Hanford, Rocky Flats, and Chelyabinsk, Russia, have paid in terms of their health, economic welfare, and even their lives. This is public anthropology at its best: the use of fine-grained, careful case studies to illuminate the critical social issues that surround nuclear production. It will provoke a healthy public debate about our nuclear past and our future.” —Louise Lamphere, Past President, American Anthropological Association www.sarpress.org 21 CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL I S S U E S Indians & Energy Exploitation and Opportunity in the American Southwest Edited by Sherry L. Smith and Brian Frehner 2010. 336 pp., figures, maps, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-15-1, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Indians & Energy explores the ways people have transformed natural resources in the American Southwest into fuel supplies for human consumption. Not only do Native Americans possess a large percentage of the Southwest’s total acreage, but much of the nation’s coal, oil, and uranium resources reside on tribal lands. Regional weather and climate patterns have also enabled Native people to take advantage of solar and wind power as sources of energy; however, complex issues related to energy and Indians transcend the region—and the nation. The contributors believe that the lessons of the Southwest can illuminate broader trends in other places. Their intent is not to end but to join the conversation and encourage others to do the same. They consider the intricate relationship between development and Indian communities in the Southwest with the hope that an understanding of patterns in the past might be useful in guiding policies and decisions in the future. Contributors: Benedict J. Colombi, Susan Dawson, Donald L. Fixico, Brian Frehner, Leah S. Glaser, Barbara Rose Johnston, Dáilan J. Long, Gary Madsen, Andrew Needham, Colleen O’Neill, Dana E. Powell, Sherry L. Smith, Rebecca Tsosie, Garrit Voggesser Published in cooperation with the William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies, Southern Methodist University. “The theme of Native Americans and energy in the Southwest is important and timely; important given the very large role that energy development has for so many southwestern tribes and the entire region; and timely because it raises such pressing questions at the intersection of debates about Native identity and tribal sovereignty, tradition and modernity, and environmental politics at a moment when global warming has brought the problem of America’s thirst for energy to the forefront.” —Orin Starn, author of Ishi’s Brain: In Search of America’s Last “Wild” Indian 22 888-390-6070 RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Keystone Nations Indigenous Peoples and Salmon across the North Pacific Edited by Benedict J. Colombi and James F. Brooks 2012. 336 pp., color plates, figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-90-8, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series The histories and futures of indigenous peoples and salmon are inextricably bound across the vast ocean expanse and rugged coastlines of the North Pacific. Keystone Nations addresses this enmeshment and the marriage of the biological and social sciences that have led to the research discussed in this book. Salmon stocks and indigenous peoples across the northern Pacific region represent a significance beyond their size in maintaining the viability and legitimacy of ecological and political systems. Both species’ futures are simultaneously a matter of the conservation concerns of natural scientists and the political agenda of Indigenous sovereignty movements that arc across the northern hemisphere. If wild salmon vanish in the North Pacific, as they largely have in the North Atlantic, their absence will herald the cascading failure of a complete marine system. If indigenous peoples vanish from the North Pacific, as they largely have in the North Atlantic, their absence will sound the failure of the world’s dominant political powers to recognize the human right to cultural expression and survival. Contributors: James F. Brooks, Courtney Carothers, Benedict J. Colombi, Sibyl Diver, Erich Kasten, David Koester, Marianne Elisabeth Lien, Charles R. Menzies, Katherine Reedy-Maschner, Victoria N. Sharakhmatova, Courtland L. Smith, Emma Wilson “Keystone Nations examines unique coastal cultures that have managed fisheries for several millennia. The Itelmen, Koryak, Aleut, Sugpiaq, and Nimiipuu peoples have all made their lives from our oceans. This book warns of what can happen if we don’t change how we manage our harvesting of fish from the ocean. Ask yourself, how can we change our fisheries’ policies so they are sustainable for our global community? Do you want your children’s children to have fish to eat too?” —Sven Haakanson, Executive Director Alutiiq Museum “Few truly wild species are as closely interwoven with human culture as Pacific salmon. They are the foundation of both sustenance and cultural identity fr hundreds of local communities from California to the Korean Peninsula. Salmon are the ultimate keystone species. Keystone Nations describes for the first time the ancient and complex relationship between wild salmon and the human communities that depend on them across the vast North Pacific arc.” —Guido Rahr, President, Wild Salmon Center CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL I S S U E S Nature, Science, and Religion New Landscapes of Inequality Intersections Shaping Society and the Environment Neoliberalism and the Erosion of Democracy in America Edited by Catherine M. Tucker 2012. 304 pp., figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-52-6, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series This book is about the complicated and provocative ways nature, science, and religion intersect in real settings where people attempt to live in harmony with their physical environment. Scholars of philosophy, religious studies, and science and technology have been at the forefront of critiquing the roles of religion and science in human interactions with the natural world. Meanwhile, researchers in the environmental sciences have encountered disciplinary barriers to examining the possibility that religious beliefs influence social–ecological behaviors and processes simply because the issue resists quantitative assessment. The contributors to this book explore how scientific knowledge and spiritual beliefs are engaged to shape natural resource management, environmental activism, and political processes. Contributors Andrea Ballestero, Marthinus L. Daneel, Anne Motley Hallum, Adrian J. Ivakhiv, Colleen M. Scanlan Lyons, Andrew S. Mathews, Kristin Norget, Joel Robbins, Scott Schnell, Catherine M. Tucker “This fascinating book admirably succeeds in navigating the complexities of a challenging and conflicted landscape. It refreshingly provides new nuanced understandings grounded in a set of penetrating case studies. These engaged and engaging scholars adeptly illuminate some of the ways that people of religious faith are considering environmental matters while others including environmentalists are considering the relevance of religious faiths for environmental concerns. This book is most welcome and valuable as a pioneering multidisciplinary contribution to the new intellectual and pragmatic frontier scrutinizing the dynamic interrelationships among religions and ecologies.”—Leslie E. Sponsel, author of Spiritual Ecology: A Quiet Revolution “The book is a strong contribution to the literature on the general topic of religion and environment.”—Julie Velásquez Runk, University of Georgia “The strength of the volume lies in the case studies and on-the-ground field examples of the nuanced and complex relationship between practiced religion and local environmental concerns…. [Nature, Science, and Religion] can add to the emerging collection of in-depth anthropological investigations of environmental conflict and how religious beliefs, values, and practices provide support for citizen action.”—Stephanie Kaza, University of Vermont Edited by Jane L. Collins, Micaela di Leonardo, and Brett Williams 2008. 304 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-01-4, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series The twenty-first century opened with a rapidly growing array of markers of human misery: endemic warfare, natural disasters, global epidemics, and climate change. Behind the dismal headlines are a series of closely connected, long-term politicaleconomic processes, often glossed as the rise of neoliberal capitalism. This phenomenon rests on the presumption that capitalist trade “liberalization” will lead inevitably to market growth and optimal ends. But so far the results have not been positive. Focusing on the United States, the contributors to this volume analyze how the globalization of newly untrammeled capitalism has exacerbated preexisting inequalities; how the retreat of the benevolent state and the rise of the punitive, imperial state are related; how poorly privatized welfare institutions provide services; how neoliberal and neo-conservative ideologies are melding; and how recurrent moral panics misrepresent class, race, gender, and sexual realities. Contributors: Michelle R. Boyd, Melissa Checker, Jane L. Collins, Micaela di Leonardo, Amal Hassan Fadlalla, Roger N. Lancaster, Nancy MacLean, Gina M. Pérez, Dorothy Roberts, Brett Williams “This timely, gloomy, informative, and illuminating volume brings together an interdisciplinary set of voices to reveal what happens when ‘markets rule,’ the state retreats from its legal (and moral) duties, and ‘punitive governance’ becomes the norm.” —Alisse Waterston, City University of New York www.sarpress.org 23 CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL I S S U E S Pharmaceutical Self The Global Shaping of Experience in an Age of Psychopharmacology Edited by Janis H. Jenkins 2011. 280 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-38-0, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series This book addresses a critical contemporary issue—the worldwide proliferation of pharmaceutical use. The contributors explore questions such as: How are culturally constituted selves transformed by regular ingestion of pharmaceutical drugs? Does “being human” increasingly come to mean not only oriented to drugs but also created and regulated by them? From the standpoint of cultural phenomenology, does this reshape human “being”? An anthropological study that examines both human suffering and its biological realities, Pharmaceutical Self focuses on the social, cultural, and political aspects of the expanding distribution of psychopharmacological drugs. Contributors: João Biehl, Stefan Ecks, Byron J. Good, Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good, Janis H. Jenkins, Tanya Luhrmann, Emily Martin, Jonathan M. Metzl, A. Jamie Saris “At the intersection of the growing domains of research on the permanent reinvention of the self and the empire of the drug industry in the contemporary world, Janis Jenkins’s edited volume brings together the best specialists of both fields to open the promising territory of an anthropology of psychopharmaceuticals. With its unique global perspective, the book explores the way in which psychotropic medicines against insomnia, depression, or psychosis affect bodies and minds but also transform the moral and political meanings of suffering and trauma.” —Didier Fassin, the James D. Wolfensohn Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), coauthor of The Empire of Trauma “Pharmaceutical Self plumbs the biosocial complexity inherent in the globalization of psychoactive drugs. The authors, ranking figures in medical anthropology, explore the collision of structural violence—poverty, gender inequality, discrimination, and disasters both natural and unnatural—and neuropsychiatry, and how social forces become embodied in adverse health outcomes and new subjectivities in psychiatric patients’ local worlds. The thematic, theoretical, and geographic breadth of this volume—with experience-near accounts from settings as different as under-resourced clinics in Indonesia to homeless shelters in Chicago—provides valuable contributions to the burgeoning anthropology of psychopharmacology. Essential reading for any student of global mental health and for students of public health more generally.” —Paul Farmer, Chair, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School Remaking Life & Death Toward an Anthropology of the Biosciences Edited by Sarah Franklin and Margaret Lock 2003. 392 pp., figures, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-19-0, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-20-6, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series 24 888-390-6070 The Seductions of Community Emancipations, Oppressions, Quandaries Edited by Gerald W. Creed 2006. 336 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-68-8, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-69-5, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL I S S U E S Timely Assets The Politics of Resources and Their Temporalities Edited by Elizabeth Emma Ferry and Mandana E. Limbert 2008. 298 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-06-9, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Oil is running out. What is more, its final depletion, once relegated to a misty future, now seems imminent. In all the more or less apocalyptic discussions of oil and similar depleted resources, nature, labor, and time converge. This volume focuses on how resources, resource-making, and resource-claiming are entangled with experiences of time. Particular expressions of “resource imaginations” often have a strongly temporal aspect: they frame the past, present, and future in certain ways; they propose or preclude certain kinds of time reckoning; they inscribe teleologies; they are imbued with affects of time—nostalgia, hope, dread, spontaneity, and so on. Examining resources as various as silver in Mexico, “diversity” in an American university, and historical documents in Indonesia, the contributors to this volume ask several questions: Under what conditions and with what consequences do people find something to be a resource? What kinds of temporal experiences, concepts, or narratives does thinking of things as resources entail? How does the making and imagining of resources assume or condition particular understandings of past, present, and future? How do understandings of time shape the ways resources are named, managed, or allocated? Contributors: Courtney Childs, Paul K. Eiss, Elizabeth Emma Ferry, Richard Handler, Mandana E. Limbert, Celia Lowe, Erik Mueggler, Paul Nadasdy, Huong Nguyen, Karen Strassler “The grounded ethnographic treatment of the multiplicity of temporal relations…in this collection is revelatory. The focus on the ‘future-tobe’ many of these [chapters] provide is a particularly useful contribution to a new and exciting conversation emerging about the future as an ethnographic site.”—Pete Richardson, University of Michigan “By extending resources beyond ‘things’ such as wealth, land, metals, or food, the text complicates the mere definition of resources, extending into the areas of knowledge, history, and people.” —Gregory Stephen Gullette, Santa Clara University Violence Edited by Neil L. Whitehead 2004. 320 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-51-0, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-52-7, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series www.sarpress.org 25 CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology in the Margins of the State Edited by Veena Das and Deborah Poole 2004. 352 pp., notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-40-4, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-41-1, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series Critical Anthropology Now Unexpected Contexts, Shifting Constituencies, Changing Agendas Edited by George E. Marcus 1999. 456 pp., notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-50-3, $29.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-51-0, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series Anthropological and Psychological Interpretations Edited by Barbara Tedlock 1992. 320 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-81-7, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series The Empire of Things Regimes of Value and Material Culture Edited by Fred R. Myers 2001. 368 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6x9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-05-3, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-06-0, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series Cyborgs & Citadels Historical Ecology Anthropological Interventions in Emerging Sciences and Technologies Cultural Knowledge and Changing Landscapes Edited by Gary Lee Downey and Joseph Dumit 1997. 324 pp., figures, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-96-1, $29.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-97-8, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series 26 Dreaming 888-390-6070 Edited by Carole L. Crumley 1994. 304 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-85-5, $19.95 Advanced Seminar Series CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY NEW! Images That Move Edited by Patricia Spyer and Mary Margaret Steedly 2013. 416 pp., color plates, figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-91-5, $39.95 Advanced Seminar Series Images play a significant part in projects of “poetic world-making” and political transformation. They participate in the production of commensuration or of incommensurability, enact moments of prophecy or exposure, and attract or repel spectators’ attention. But any examination of images in motion must also recognize the blockages and breakdowns that prevent their movement, as well as the enframings or “stickinesses” that trap them in particular places and prevent them from reaching others. Images That Move 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. “Images That Move is a wonderful volume, full of surprises and illuminations. This represents the most current thinking about the anxieties, entanglements, and mobilizations in work on the circulation of culture as manifest in the complexities of the image.” —Fred R. Myers, New York University “This book will be most welcome for a field that is urgently in need of ways to conceptualize the crucial work of images in the formation of subjects, publics, and social imaginaries today. The essays are richly interdisciplinary, theoretically sophisticated, and varied in terms of geographical location, type of image, and theoretical approach.” —Karen Strassler, Queens College of the City University of New York “Images That Move brings together some of the most prominent and interesting thinkers in visual culture studies and the anthropology of media and images. The contributors’ essays, without exception, offer extremely original materials and perspectives on images and are grounded in first-rate scholarship.”—Kenneth M. George, author of Picturing Islam: Art and Ethics in a Muslim Lifeworld Contributors: Ernst van Alphen, Christiane Brosius, Steven C. Caton, Finbarr Barry Flood, Brian Larkin, Oliver Moore, Rosalind C. Morris, Christopher Pinney, Patricia Spyer, Mary Margaret Steedly CONTENTS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. Introduction: Images That Move Inciting Modernity? Images, Alterities, and the Contexts of “Cartoon Wars” The Enclave Gaze: Images and Imaginaries of Neoliberal Lifestyle in New Delhi Images without Borders: Violence, Visuality, and Landscape in Postwar Ambon, Indonesia Narrow Predictions and Retrospective Aura: Photographic Images and Experiences from China “Augurs and Haruspices”: Photographic Practices and Publics in India, 1840–2008 Two Masks: Images of Future History and the Posthuman in Postapartheid South Africa Explosions of Information, Implosions of Meaning, and the Release of Affects Making Equivalence Happen: Commensuration and the Architecture of Circulation Transparency and Apparition: Media Ghosts of Post–New Order Indonesia From Lawrence of Arabia to Special Operations Forces: The “White Sheik” as a Modular Image in Twentieth-Century Popular Culture www.sarpress.org 27 CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY Other Intentions Cultural Contexts and the Attribution of Inner States Edited by Lawrence Rosen 1995. 264 pp., notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-88-6, $29.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-89-3, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series Recapturing Anthropology Working in the Present Edited by Richard G. Fox 1991. 264 pp., notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-78-7, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series BEST SELLER! Senses of Place Edited by Steven Feld and Keith H. Basso 1996. 310 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6x9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-95-4, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series Contributors: Keith H. Basso, Karen I. Blu, Edward S. Casey, Steven Feld, Charles O. Frake, Clifford Geertz, Miriam Kahn, Kathleen C. Stewart “What an anthropology of place, space, and landscape needs to achieve.… [Senses of Place] demonstrates the continued power and vitality of detailed ethnographic research.” —Eric Hirsch, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute “Indeed, the entire book pulsates with remarkable writing...this thoughtful SAR seminar volume should refresh the most jaded theoretical appetites.” —Michael Herzfeld, American Anthropologist “This book is recommended to anyone interested either in the different nature of ‘place’ as a cultural construct or in the concrete materialities of any of the mentioned geographical sites. The reader’s curiosity will be amply repaid in the form of often unexpected insights, knowledges and plain old fascinating stories.” —Ulf Strohmayer, The Geographical Journal COMING SOON! Pre-order this book now. Street Economies in the Urban Global South Edited by Karen Tranberg Hansen, Walter E. Little, B. Lynne Milgram 2013. Approximately 272 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-938645-14-3, $39.95 Advanced Seminar Series This book focuses on the economic, political, social, and cultural dynamics of street economies across the urban Global South. The contributors present cases from postsocialist Vietnam to a struggling democracy in the Philippines, from the former command economies in Africa to previously authoritarian regimes in Latin America. Although contestations over public space have a long history, Street Economies in the Urban Global South presents the argument that the recent conjuncture of neoliberal economic policies and unprecedented urban growth in the Global South has changed the equation. The detailed ethnographic accounts focus on the experiences of often marginalized street workers who describe their projects and plans. Using ethnographic evidence, the contributors highlight individual and collective resistance by street vendors to overcome the numerous processes and factors exacerbating marginality and disempowerment of street economy work. Contributors: Florence E. Babb, Ray Bromley, Gracia C. Clark, Karen Tranberg Hansen, Maria Hedman, Walter E. Little, Ilda Lindell, B. Lynne Milgram, Wilma S. Nchito, Suzanne Scheld, Linda J. Seligmann, Lydia Siu, Sarah Turner, Kyle-Nathan Verboomen 28 888-390-6070 CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY NEW! Vital Relations Modernity and the Persistent Life of Kinship Edited by Susan McKinnon and Fenella Cannell 2013. 360 pp., figures, maps, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-938645-01-3, $39.95 Advanced Seminar Series “ Vital Relations is an enlightening book with far-reaching implications for the perception of the place the study of kinship holds in sociocultural anthropology. We have been waiting for this book, and I say this not just as someone interested in the subject field, and in anthropology at large, but as a teacher. Kinship courses have for too long relied on the debates about assisted conception (new reproductive technologies) and its ramifications to make the point that kinship issues are of our times; these chapters offer a wealth of concisely argued case material across a spectrum of contexts to correct the balance. It will be a brilliant teaching tool!” —Marilyn Strathern, University of Cambridge “This is a fresh, thought provoking, and timely book. Vital Relations addresses the relationship between kinship and ‘modernity’ in novel ways. There has been a longstanding tendency within the discipline of sociocultural anthropology to view kinship as central to the organization of small-scale societies and playing only a limited role in modern life. The assumption has been that as societies move from being simple to being complex, kinship essentially withers away in favor of relationships organized on the basis of political and economic factors. The chapters in this volume beautifully challenge this set of assumptions. This is anthropology at its best—rich in ethnographic detail and new analytical insights.” —Sandra Bamford, University of Toronto “ Vital Relations is a vital work. It restores to anthropology a critical focus on kinship that was erased by the self-congratulatory discourse of modernity. But in place of yesteryear’s focus on abstruse (if important) aspects of complex terminologies, this new approach tears aside the veil of disinterestedness that modern institutions such as the nation-state have constructed for themselves, and reveals a persistent emphasis on kinship in ideologically improbable places. In riveting, empirically grounded chapters drawn from a rich array of cultural contexts ranging from ghosts in Malaysian blood banks to the place of kinship in state systems and its impact on an imagined global future, the authors challenge the power of institutions to disguise their own fundamental dependence on kinship. No responsible analyst of modernity will henceforth be able to pretend that kinship has become irrelevant.” —Michael Herzfeld, Ernest E. Monrad Professor of the Social Sciences, Harvard University Contributors: Laura Bear, Barbara Bodenhorn, Fenella Cannell, Janet Carsten, Gillian Feeley-Harnik, Michael Lambek, Susan McKinnon, Danilyn Rutherford, Elana Shever, Sylvia J. Yanagisako CONTENTS 1. The Difference Kinship Makes 2. Kinship within and beyond the “Movement of Progressive Societies” 3. Transnational Family Capitalism: Producing “Made in Italy” in China 4. “I Am a Petroleum Product”: Making Kinship Work on the Patagonian Frontier 5. Ghosts, Commensality, and Scuba Diving: Tracing Kinship and Sociality in Clinical Pathology Labs and Blood Banks in Penang 6. On the Road Again: Movement, Marriage, Mestizaje, and the Race of Kinship 7. “This Body Is Our Body”: Vishwakarma Puja, the Social Debts of Kinship, and Theologies of Materiality in a Neoliberal Shipyard 8. Placing the Dead: Kinship, Slavery, and Free Labor in Pre– and Post–Civil War America 9. The Re-enchantment of Kinship 10. Kinship, Modernity, and the Immodern 11. Kinship and Catastrophe: Global Warming and the Rhetoric of Descent www.sarpress.org 29 GLOBALIZATION Figuring the Future 2011 Society for the Anthropology of Work Book Prize Globalization and the Temporalities of Children and Youth Women Navigating Cultural and Economic Marginalities Edited by Jennifer Cole and Deborah Durham 2008. 320 pp., figures, appendix, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-05-2, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Child laborers in South Asia, child soldiers in Sierra Leone and Uganda, Chinese youth playing computer games to earn virtual gold, youth involved in sex trafficking in the former Soviet republics and Thailand: these are just some of the young people featured in current media. The idea that young people are more malleable and the truisms that “youth are the future” or “children are our hope for the future” give news stories and scholarly accounts added meaning. To address how and why youth and children have come to seem so important to globalization, the contributors to this book look at both the spatial relations and the temporal dimensions of globalization in places as far apart as Oakland, California, and Tamatave, Madagascar, in situations as disparate as the idealization of childhood innocence and the brutal lives of street children. Discourses of—and practices by— youth and children, from the design of toys to political mobilization, are critical sites through which people everywhere conceive of, produce, contest, and naturalize the new futures. Contributors: Anne Allison, Ann Anagnost, Jennifer Cole, Deborah Durham, Paula S. Fass, Constance A. Flanagan, Tobias Hecht, Barrie Thorne, Brad Weiss “Any scholar dealing with contemporary childhood will certainly profit from consulting the book.” —Peter Stearns, George Mason University “This edited volume will be a welcome and much sought after addition to the vibrant and expanding literature on childhood, youth, and globalization.” —Ritty Lukose, University of Pennsylvania 30 888-390-6070 The Gender of Globalization Edited by Nandini Gunewardena and Ann Kingsolver 2007. 376 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-91-6, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Contributors: Mary Anglin, A. Lynn Bolles, Karen Brodkin, William L. Conwill, Ulrika Dahl, Akosua K. Darkwah, Nandini Gunewardena, Faye V. Harrison, Ann Kingsolver, Louise Lamphere, Mary H. Moran, Annapurna Pandey, Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, Sandy Smith-Nonini, Barbara Sutton “One of the book’s greatest strengths is that, as a collection, it addresses side by side the similarities between marginalized women in very different areas of the globe while never losing track of the particular differences that geography, class, caste, ethnicity, race, and even age can have on the ways in which women experience the problems and possibilities of globalization.”—Alicia DeNicola, Anthropology of Work Review Global Health in Times of Violence Edited by Barbara Rylko-Bauer, Linda Whiteford, and Paul Farmer 2009. 304 pp., figures, map, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-14-4, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series What are the prospects for human health in a world threatened by disease and violence? Since World War II, at least 160 wars have erupted around the globe. More than 24 million people have died in these conflicts, and millions more suffered illness and injury. In this volume, leading scholars and practitioners examine the impact of structural, military, and communal violence on health, psychosocial well-being, and health care delivery. Contributors: Philippe Bourgois, Paul Farmer, Didier Fassin, H. K. Heggenhougen, Carolyn Nordstrom, James Quesada, Barbara Rylko-Bauer, Merrill Singer, Linda Whiteford “[This book] will make an important contribution to the growing field of the anthropology of violence. People will read this volume because of the topic, its timeliness, and the reputation of the participants…it provides very useful and important cases and analyses of structural violence and how it links to individual experience and health.” —Tom Leatherman, University of South Carolina “The theoretical discussions and extensive integration with anthropological studies of different kinds of violence in various settings displayed in each chapter make this an ideal choice for graduate courses. Underemphasized in the prologue and epilogue is the theme of hope and health, of resilience in the face of violence both episodic and chronic. Yet this volume is filled with accounts of resilience and resourcefulness.” —Jean N. Scandlyn, Medical Anthropology Quarterly “The majority of the authors devote a portion of their chapter to a discussion of what can be done to address structural violence and its impact on health.… The editors believe in the need to witness, advocate, expose in the hopes of making even a small difference in perspectives, policies, and ultimately, peoples’ health in these times of global violence. This spirit…as presented by some of the leading anthropologists researching health and violence, make this volume a significant contribution to the ever-growing literature on violence studies.”—Heidi Bauer-Clapp, Landscapes of Violence GLOBALIZATION RECENTLY PUBLISHED! The Global Middle Classes Theorizing Through Ethnography Edited by Rachel Heiman, Carla Freeman, and Mark Liechty 2012. 368 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-53-3, $34.95 E-book, ISBN 978-1-938645-05-1, $24.00 Advanced Seminar Series Surging middle-class aspirations and anxieties throughout the world have recently compelled anthropologists to pay serious attention to middle classes and middle-class spaces, sentiments, lifestyles, labors, and civic engagements. Middle classness has become a powerful category for self-identification, while political and corporate leaders increasingly hail “the middle classes” as the ideal subject-citizenry. Ethnographically rich and culturally particular, the essays in this volume elucidate middle-class experience and discourse and in so doing add critical nuance to theories of class itself. Contributors: Krisztina Fehérváry, Carla Freeman, Rachel Heiman, Carla Jones, Cindi Katz, Mark Liechty, Samuli Schielke, Sanjay Srivastava, Rihan Yeh, Li Zhang “The middle classes, robust in some countries, but fragile in others, exert significant impact on the fate of nations and continents. In a trailblazing departure, The Global Middle Classes identifies the middle class as the lens through which anthropology contributes to the study of contemporary globalization. From Egypt to Hungary, India to Indonesia, Kathmandu to Kunming, the New York suburbs and Mexican border to the Caribbean islands, the authors present compelling portraits of how middle class practices and aspirations are contingently connected to global capitalism.”—Aihwa Ong, coeditor of Worlding Cities: Asian Experiments in the Art of Being Global “This outstanding collection casts light on the cultural worlds of the global middle classes, showing that they are connected by webs of consumption, aspiration, and communication but are also distinct in their styles, priorities, and anxieties. These essays are ethnographic jewels covering India, Mexico, China, and several other sites, but are also beautifully linked to a wide body of social theory and historical comparison. This book is a feast for anthropologists, sociologists, and historians concerned with globalization and with class as emergent phenomena of the world we live in.”—Arjun Appadurai, Goddard Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication, NYU “Thought-provoking, theoretically sophisticated, and empirically rich, this superb collection draws attention to the diversity of middle classes in different parts of the world.”—Akhil Gupta, director, UCLA Center for India and South Asia Globalization, Water, & Health Resource Management in Times of Scarcity Edited by Linda Whiteford and Scott Whiteford 2005. 336 pp., figures, maps, tables, notes, references, index, 6x9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-57-2, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-58-9, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series www.sarpress.org 31 HISTORYA N D SOCIAL SCIENCES Anthropology in the Diaspora Memory, History, and Opposition Edited by Kevin A. Yelvington Under State Socialism Afro-Atlantic Dialogues 2006. 520 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, tables, notes, references, index, 6x9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-45-9, $39.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-46-6, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Edited by Rubie S. Watson 1994. 224 pp., notes, references, index, 6x9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-86-2, $29.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-87-9, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series Small Worlds History in Person Enduring Struggles, Contentious Practice, Intimate Identities Edited by Dorothy Holland and Jean Lave 2001. 404 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-00-8, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-01-5, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Imperial Formations Edited by Ann Laura Stoler, Carole McGranahan, and Peter C. Perdue 2007. 448 pp., notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-73-2, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series Law & Empire in the Pacific Fiji and Hawai‘i Edited by Sally Engle Merry and Donald Brenneis 2004. 336 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-24-4, $24.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-25-1, $19.95 Advanced Seminar Series 32 888-390-6070 Method, Meaning, and Narrative in Microhistory Edited by James F. Brooks, Christopher R. N. DeCorse, and John Walton 2008. 346 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-94-7, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series Growing dissatisfaction with global perspectives and meta-narratives has led to renewed interest in the research genre known as microhistory. As it gained currency, microhistory came to refer to a particular style of work characterized by disenchantment with grand theories of modernization. Its advocates called for a return to narrative, detailed analysis on a small scale, and the search for unforeseen meanings embedded in research cases. The essential feature of this perspective is a search for meaning in the microcosm, the large lessons discovered in small worlds. The contributors to this volume urge that potential commonalities of archaeology and history, of sociology and anthropology, be recognized; and they urge that historical interpretation move freely across disciplines. Historical study should be held up to the present and individual lives be understood as the intersection of biography and history. The authors develop these themes in a kaleidoscope of places and periods—West Africa, the Yucatán, Medieval Italy, Argentina, California, Brazil, Virginia, Spain, and Boston—small worlds that are the worlds we experience, study, and sequentially fit together in bigger pictures. Contributors: Mary C. Beaudry, Kathleen Blee, James F. Brooks, Christopher R. N. DeCorse,Paul K. Eiss, Rebecca Jean Emigh, Linda Gordon, Michael Harkin, Kent G. Lightfoot, Richard Maddox, Dale Tomich, John Walton “Small Worlds should prove to be a most valuable volume for students and scholars…particularly those who now question broad generalizations.… [The book] will not only provide fresh guidelines to new levels of understanding but also foster a comparative approach to experience in small worlds all over the globe.” —Howard R. Lamar, Yale University INDIGENOUS Aboriginal Business Alliances in a Remote Australian Town STUDIES Kimberly Christen 2009. 334 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-98-5, $29.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series From the vantage point of the remote Northern Territory town of Tennant Creek in Australia, this book examines the practical partnerships and awkward alliances that constitute indigenous modernities. It is an ethnographic snapshot of the Warumungu people as they engage with a range of interlocutors, including transnational railroad companies, national mining groups, international tourists, and regional businesses. Although the Warumungu are the traditional owners of the country in and around present day Tennant Creek, the history of white settlement and Aboriginal displacement has made this town, for better and worse, a site for the ongoing process of interdependent community-making. Anthropologist Kimberly Christen examines both the colonial past and the contemporary practices of alliance-making that set the stage for an alternative future, rerouting the national and global narratives that confine indigenous people to the margins. Warumungu “mobs”—variously connected and shifting sets of kin—actively seek to carve out a space within a nation that both condemns and celebrates them. “This is not simply ethnography for its own sake, but a sustained deployment of ethnography in response to the vexed circulation of representations (scholarly, popular, narrowly political, and so on) with which indigenous minorities everywhere must engage. Christen’s strong approach to the current realities is a breath of fresh air and highly original.” —Fred Myers, New York University “Christen has drawn upon impressive ethnographic research to craft a moving and important book that captures some of the dilemmas and hopes of the present moment in Aboriginal Australia and that also has the potential to shape broader anthropological questions about the conditions of indigeneity, the ways that collectives forge alliances, the currency of culture, and the contours of economic ‘development.’” —Jessica Cattelino, University of California, Los Angeles “Engaging book.... An achievement that will speak to a broad audience of scholars, activists, and general readers.” —Deborah Breen, Boston University, Indigenous Peoples Issues and Resources “Aboriginal Business offers welcome and timely insights into both historical issues and contemporary social concerns.... Kim Christen offers an analysis that is at once timely and timeless.” —Will Owen, Aboriginal Art & Culture: an American eye 2012 New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards, Finalist 2012 Robert W. Hamilton Book Award, Runner-up 2011 Southern Anthropological Society James Mooney Award, Co-Winner 2011 ForeWord Reviews Book of the Year Award, Finalist Becoming Indian The Struggle over Cherokee Identity in the Twenty-first Century Circe Sturm 2011. 280 pp., figures, map, tables, appendices, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-44-1, $27.95 Resident Scholar Series In Becoming Indian, author Circe Sturm examines Cherokee identity politics and the phenomenon of racial shifting. Racial shifters, as described by Sturm, are people who have changed their racial self-identification from non-Indian to Indian on the US Census. Many racial shifters are people who, while looking for their roots, have recently discovered their Native American ancestry. Others have family stories of an Indian great-great-grandmother or -grandfather they have not been able to document. Still others have long known they were of Native American descent, including their tribal affiliation, but only recently have become interested in reclaiming this aspect of their family history. Despite their differences, racial shifters share a conviction that they have Indian blood when asserting claims of indigeneity. Becoming Indian explores the social and cultural values that lie behind this phenomenon and delves into the motivations of these Americans— from so many different walks of life—to reinscribe their autobiographies and find deep personal and collective meaning in reclaiming their Indianness. Sturm points out that “becoming Indian” was not something people were quite as willing to do forty years ago—the willingness to do so now reveals much about the shifting politics of race and indigeneity in the United States. “Circe Sturm is among the most influential, innovative scholars of Native American experience today. Becoming Indian examines the phenomenon of ‘race shifters’—sometimes derided as ‘wannabes’ and ‘fake Indians’—who have claimed Native identity by the many thousands in recent decades. It’s a tricky, touchy topic, and yet one that Sturm handles with characteristic empathy and insight. Her book gives us a new understanding of the struggle over who will count as Native American and the tangled politics of heritage, blood, and belonging in twenty-first century America.” —Orin Starn, author of Ishi’s Brain: In Search of America’s Last “Wild” Indian “Becoming Indian is an utterly absorbing study of Cherokee associational life in the age of multicultural America. With her engaging style and crystal clear understanding of complex race and social relations, Circe Sturm unveils the intricate motivations of individuals and groups with newly claimed Cherokee identities, as well as the reactions to their claims by members of the three federally recognized Cherokee nations. Sturm develops a novel vocabulary and fresh conceptualizations to describe these ‘racial shifters’ and ‘citizen Cherokees,’ revealing that while often at odds, they do share common epistemological ground.”—Tiya A. Miles, University of Michigan www.sarpress.org 33 INDIGENOUS STUDIES BEST SELLER! 2007 New Mexico Book Awards, Finalist For Indigenous Eyes Only Beyond Red Power American Indian Politics and Activism since 1900 Edited by Daniel M. Cobb and Loretta Fowler 2007. 368 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-86-2, $24.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series Contributors: Darryl Baldwin, Jessica R. Cattelino, David Anthony Tyeeme Clark, Daniel M. Cobb, Donald Fixico, Loretta Fowler, Taiawagi Helton, Frederick E. Hoxie, Clara Sue Kidwell, Larry Nesper, Julie Olds, Katherine M. B. Osburn, Lindsay Robertson, Sherry L. Smith, Circe Sturm, Helen Hornbeck Tanner, John W. Troutman, Della Warrior “We are woefully short of books that effectively convey the depth and diversity of Native American political life in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and scholars will welcome this volume.” —Colin G. Calloway, Dartmouth College Dances of the Tewa Pueblo Indians Expressions of New Life, second edition Jill D. Sweet 2004. 136 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, map, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-29-9, $19.95 Resident Scholar Series A Decolonization Handbook Edited by Waziyatawin Angela Wilson and Michael Yellow Bird 2005. 224 pp., figures, activities, resources, index, 8 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-63-3, $19.95 Discount available for indigenous peoples and communities. Call 888-390-6070. Contributors: Suzan Shown Harjo (Hodulgee Muscogee and Cheyenne), CHiXapKaid or Michael Pavel (Skokomish), Cornel Pewewardy (Comanche and Kiowa), Robert Odawi Porter (Seneca), James Riding In (Pawnee), T'hohahoken or Michael Dextater (Kaniieniehaka), Waziyatawin Angela Wilson (Dakota), and Michael Yellow Bird (Sahnish/Arikara and Hidatsa) “Intertwined commentary on colonialism and some of the theoretical underpinnings of decolonization…mixes with functionalist advice.… Regardless of the degree of translation among tribal communities, the positions of these intellectuals frame important points of information for ‘indigenous eyes’ in particular. Ideas are important and the call for action trumpeted in this Decolonization Handbook is what all Indian students should consider.” —Gregory Gagnon, North Dakota Quarterly “For Indigenous Eyes Only...is an exciting and useful new text aimed at inspiring and facilitating Native American community activism. With clearly written chapters covering topics ranging from dismantling Native American sports mascots to creating tribal think tanks, the book provides a comprehensive toolbox for postcolonial resistance. The book’s intention of encouraging activism, its coverage, and its use of postcolonial theory for Native American studies make it an important addition to contemporary scholarship.... I admire the authors’ ambitious goals and would recommend this book for any reader interested in Native American activism or indigenous resistance writ large.” —Rebecca Weaver-Hightower, North Dakota Quarterly “Buy this book in quantity; share it; give it away; and use it to change the world.… The greatness lies in the authors’ willingness to tackle the tough issues of today.… The book represents the best in scholarship: a compassion for the people and the hope that education can serve the people through liberation.” —Michael W. Simpson, Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education 34 888-390-6070 INDIGENOUS STUDIES RECENTLY PUBLISHED! For Indigenous Minds Only A Decolonization Handbook Edited by Waziyatawin and Michael Yellow Bird 2012. 284 pp., figures, tables, activities, resources, notes, index, 8 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-93-9, $24.95 For Indigenous Minds Only features Indigenous scholars, writers, and activists who have collaborated for the creation of a sequel to For Indigenous Eyes Only (SAR Press, 2005). The title reflects an understanding that decolonizing actions must begin in the mind, and that creative, consistent decolonized thinking shapes and empowers the brain, which in turn provides a major prime for positive change. Included in this book are discussions of global collapse, what to consider in returning to a land-based existence, demilitarization for imperial purposes and re-militarization for Indigenous purposes, survival strategies for tribal prisoners, moving beyond the nation-state model, a land-based educational model, personal decolonization, decolonization strategies for youth in custody, and decolonizing gender roles. As with For Indigenous Eyes Only, the authors do not intend to provide universal solutions for problems stemming from centuries of colonialism. Rather, they hope to facilitate and encourage critical thinking skills while offering recommendations for fostering community discussions and plans for purposeful community action. For Indigenous Minds Only will serve an important need within Indigenous communities for years to come. Contributors: George Blue Bird (Lakota), Gregory A. Cajete (Santa Clara Pueblo), Ngaropi Diane Cameron (Iwi: Ngā ti Mutunga, Ngā ti Kahungunu ki Wairoa, Mā ori, New Zealand), Chaw-win-is (Ruth Ogilvie, Nuu-chah-nulth), Jeff Corntassel (Cherokee Nation), Scott DeMuth (Dakota ancestry), Na’cha’uaht/Kam’ayaam (Cliff Atleo Jr., Nuu-chah-nulth and Tsimshian), Leonie Pihama (Iwi: Te Ātiawa, Ngā Mā hanga ā Tairi, Ngā ti Mā hanga, Mā ori, New Zealand), Waziyatawin (Dakota), Molly Wickham (Wet’suwet’en Nation), Michael Yellow Bird (Sahnish and Hidatsa Nations) “This book is absolutely for indigenous minds and spirits; a book that challenges our minds and awakens our spirits, expands our minds and allows our spirits to soar.”—Linda Tuhiwai Smith, University of Waikato, Aotearoa (New Zealand) “This is a highly useful anthology for anyone interested in Indigenous scholarship and philosophies. It will add immensely to the growing scholarship of First Peoples globally.”—Erica Neeganagwedgin, Indigenous Peoples Issues and Resources Cover illustration: Releasing the Spirits of the Mind by Monte O. Yellow Bird Sr. AKA Black Pinto Horse (blackpintohorsefinearts.com). This image was specifically created for For Indigenous Minds Only. It is designed on a US Cavalry recruiting ledger circa 1800s to demonstrate the resilience and persistence of the People over colonization. Más Que un Indio (More than an Indian) Racial Ambivalence and Neoliberal Multiculturalism in Guatemala Charles R. Hale 2006. 304 pp., figures, glossary, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-60-2, $24.95 Resident Scholar Series www.sarpress.org 35 INDIGENOUS STUDIES Maya Nationalisms and Postcolonial Challenges in Guatemala Coloniality, Modernity, and Identity Politics Emilio del Valle Escalante 2009. 224 pp., notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-13-8, $34.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series This book focuses on the emergence and political-cultural implications of Guatemala’s Maya movement. It explores how, since the 1970s, indigenous peoples have been challenging established, hegemonic narratives of modernity, history, nation, and cultural identity as these concepts relate to the indigenous world. For the most part, these narratives have been fabricated by nonindigenous writers who have had the power not only to produce and spread knowledge but also to speak for and about the Maya world. Contemporary Maya narratives promote nationalisms based on the reaffirmation of Maya ethnicity and languages that constitute what it means to be Maya in present-day society, as well as political-cultural projects oriented toward the future. “[Emilio del Valle Escalante] brings a cosmopolitan set of readings to bear on the subject of Guatemalan literature and offers incisive critical readings of specific texts—literary, testimonial, journalistic, and even state policy documents— while embedding them in their historical contexts, and in the streams of subaltern and ‘decolonial’ thinking from throughout the hemisphere.” —Diane Nelson, Duke University “[This book] will become a foundational text on indigenous matters throughout the hemisphere.” —Arturo Arias, University of Texas “Del Valle Escalante’s attention to the ways both Maya and their critics used writing to advance their agendas makes a valuable contribution to the rich literature on Guatemala’s experience with modernization, capitalism, and neoliberalism. Scholars of the Maya and Guatemala will find much of interest in this book.” —David Carey Jr., Ethnohistory 36 888-390-6070 RECENTLY PUBLISHED! No Deal! Indigenous Arts and the Politics of Possession Edited by Tressa Berman 2012. 282 pp., color plates, figures, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-47-2, $34.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series Cover image: Jennifer Herd, No Deal!, 2004. Courtesy of the artist. No Deal! brings together a diverse group of artists, curators, art historians, and anthropologists from Australia and North America in order to carefully investigate the social relations of possession through the artifacts and motifs of Indigenous expressive culture. The contributors speak from the standpoints of Indigenous systems of knowledge as well as from western epistemologies and address the issue of what it means to “own culture.” What do notions of “ownership” and “possession” mean when viewed through the lens of art and its associated rights to production, circulation, performance, and representation? Contributors: Tressa Berman, Jennifer Biddle, Marie Bouchard, Marco Centin, Suzanne Newman Fricke, Kathy M’Closkey, Lea S. McChesney, Eric Michaels, Nancy Marie Mithlo, Fred Myers, Nancy J. Parezo “A hugely useful resource for anyone interested in Indigenous art, culture, and questions of cultural appropriation and ownership, with some of the leaders in their fields providing valuable and thought-provoking cross-disciplinary perspectives.” —Terri Janke, Terri Janke and Company Pty Ltd, Intellectual Property Lawyers, Australia “Over the last fifty years, Indigenous art movements in Australia, New Zealand, North America, and elsewhere have been vital and potent in unexpected ways. Fresh, up-to-date, engaging, and engaged, No Deal! provides the best guide I have read to the politics of native art.” —Nicholas Thomas, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge “Tressa Berman has brought together new voices to make sense of the often complicated art world that has historically marginalized non-Western voices. Though Indigenous peoples in North America and Australia continue to live under the colonial weight of the West, there is a growing discourse that articulates these weighty circumstances that Berman and the contributors to this volume take charge in formulating and offer new strategies for engaging.” —Gerald McMaster, Independent Scholar, USA and Adjunct Curator, Art Gallery of Ontario INDIGENOUS STUDIES One State, Many Nations Indigenous Rights Struggles in Ecuador Maximilian Viatori 2010. 168 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-17-5, $29.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series The Zápara are one of the smallest Indigenous nationalities in Ecuador, with roughly two hundred members, most of whom live along the Conambo and Pindoyacu rivers in Pastaza province. The Zápara language is a member of the Zaparoan language family, a small group of Amazonian languages in eastern Ecuador and northern Peru. In 1998 four communities organized as the Nacionalidad Zápara de Ecuador with the intent of reasserting Zápara identity and establishing a legal Zápara territory distinct from those of other Indigenous nationalities in the region. At the heart of this revitalization was an attempt to document the language of the remaining Zápara elders as “proof” of these communities’ cultural uniqueness. One State, Many Nations traces the Zápara nationality’s process of self-organization and emergence within Ecuador’s Indigenous movement from 1998 to 2008 to explore the complex role that multiculturalism has played in local Indigenous politics. The paradoxical treatment of Indigenous identity is the subject of this book. Its purpose is to explore the official recognition of ethnic and cultural difference in Ecuador with the following question in mind: has the official recognition of Indigenous rights provided new opportunities for Indigenous actors or further restricted their political action? “[One State, Many Nations] looks at a series of reforms, both internal to Ecuador and coming from international institutions, that have changed the playing field for indigenous groups. [These] reforms have opened up important spaces/opportunities for indigenous groups but also embody all sorts of contradictions that actually restrict indigenous political action, create divisions within indigenous groups, and create a dependent relationship between indigenous groups and outside actors.”—Steve Striffler, University of New Orleans Global Indigenous Politics Series A forum for cutting-edge work on the politics of indigenous peoples around the world, past and present. This series is a forum for engaging work on the politics of indigenous peoples around the world, past and present. We welcome proposals for books that shed new light on the political struggles of indigenous peoples and compel us to rethink the implications of tribal autonomy or sovereignty for nation-states and transnational organizing, notions of cultural and biological property, and the very nature of politics and indigeneity. Scholarship in interdisciplinary fields centered on indigenous peoples, anthropology, history, sociology, law, art history, and related fields will be considered. The series includes both monographs and edited volumes. Orayvi Revisited Jerrold E. Levy 1992. 216 pp., black-and-white illustrations, tables, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-33-6, $35.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-27-4, $27.95 Resident Scholar Series Manuscript submission guidelines We accept proposals in English; the language of the series is English. www.sarpress.org 37 INDIGENOUS STUDIES COMING SOON! Pre-order this book now. Otros Saberes Collaborative Research on Indigenous and Afro-Descendent Cultural Politics Edited by Lynn Stephen and Charles R. Hale 2013. Approximately 262 pp., color plates, references, index, 6 x 9 Global Indigenous Politics Series Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-55-7, $34.95 The six research projects that form the core of the Otros Saberes initiative bring together a diverse group of Afro-descendant and indigenous collaborations with academics. The focus of each research project is driven by a strategic priority in the life of the community, organization, or social movement concerned. This book, written in three languages, provides an explanation of the key analytical questions and findings of each project. Contributors: Konty Bikila Cifuentes, Maylei Blackwell, Inés Canabal, Luis Carlos Castillo, Tania Delgado Hernández, Rufino Domingúez-Santos, Mark Everingham, Jocelyn A. Géliga Vargas, Libia Grueso, Charles R. Hale, R. Aída Hernández Castillo, Edizon León Castro, Centolia Maldonado Vásquez, Keisha-Khan Y. Perry, Joanne Rappaport, Odilia Romero-Hernández, Carlos Rosero, Lucy Santacruz Benavides, Lúcia Szmrecsányi, Lynn Stephen, Edwin Taylor, Dominique Tilkin Gallois, Laura Velasco Ortiz, Aikyry Wajãpi, Jawapuku Wajãpi, Marcos Williamson “ Otros Saberes is an avant-garde report from the frontlines of knowledge. By foregrounding the knowledge produced by some of the most innovative indigenous and Afro-descendant movements in Latin America at present, this volume demonstrates that activists and grassroots intellectuals are often more attuned today than academics to the kinds of questions that need to be urgently asked in the face of unprecedented ecological and social crisis. Not only that, the volume provides vivid first-hand accounts of the promises and tensions of collaborative methodologies bridging academic and activist worlds, furthering our grasp of the elusive goal of genuine collaboration. LASA and the project visionaries have accomplished an incredible theoretico-political feat in the best tradition of engaged scholarship.” —Arturo Escobar, author of Territories of Difference: Place, Movements, Life, Redes “Otros Saberes is an intriguing collaborative volume written in English, Spanish, and Portuguese by academic and non-academic intellectuals. It goes well beyond normative definitions of knowledge; also beyond ‘thought’ it offers food for political epistemic action.” —Marisol de la Cadena, UC Davis “Our Indian Princess” Subverting the Stereotype Nancy Marie Mithlo 2009. 208 pp., color plates, appendices, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-97-8, $29.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series “[This book] routinely rethinks accepted understandings, offering brilliant new thinking on issues of great importance. It has much to teach a range of audiences about gender, art, power, representation, and contemporary Native America.” —C. Richard King, Washington State University “[Mithlo] places the narratives of Native women artists in dialogue with theorists and highlights points of convergence and disparity between them. Thus she mobilizes Native women’s narratives as authoritative texts to achieve a necessary step toward reaching intellectual parity.... Some ethnographers’ efforts to alternate between their own exegesis and the narratives of consultants result in jarring and disconnected texts. However, Mithlo successfully integrates her complex theoretical discussion with the artists’ own commentary.” —Stephanie May De Montigny, Museum Anthropology Review 38 888-390-6070 Pluralizing Ethnography Comparison and Representation in Maya Cultures, Histories, and Identities Edited by John M. Watanabe and Edward F. Fischer 2004. 368 pp., figures, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-35-0, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-36-7, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series INDIGENOUS STUDIES NEW! Reassembling the Collection Ethnographic Museums and Indigenous Agency Edited by Rodney Harrison, Sarah Byrne, and Anne Clarke 2013. 368 pp., figures, maps, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-94-6, $34.95 Reassembling the Collection presents innovative approaches to the study of historical and contemporary engagements between museums and the various individuals and communities who were (and are) involved in their production and consumption. This book is interdisciplinary in scope and international in coverage. Reassembling the Collection considers the material networks and affective qualities of “things” alongside their representational role within the museum and explores the ways in which concepts of agency and indigeneity need to be reconfigured in light of the study of these concepts within the museum context. The contributors explore key themes including the idea of museums as “meshworks” and material and social assemblages; how an “archaeological sensibility” might inform approaches to understanding past and present relationships between people, “things,” and institutions in relation to museums; and the “weight of things” and sense of “curatorial responsibility,” which arises from a reconsideration of the nature of museum objects. Contributors: Joshua A. Bell, Tony Bennett, Sarah Byrne, Anne Clarke, Rodney Harrison, Kelley Hays-Gilpin, Gwyneira Isaac, Chantal Knowles, Ramson Lomatewama, Evelyn Tetehu, Robin Torrence, Chris Wingfield “A lucid, well-focused collection of essays that not only proposes a new engagement between anthropology and archaeology, but challenges weary methodologies in museology and tired museum practices. This stimulating volume proposes nothing less than a ‘Mobius museology’ in which established disciplinary, epistemological, and ethical dualisms are exchanged for an infinitely more nuanced, complex, and dialogical approach. This broad sensibility intermeshes academic, indigenous, and practical viewpoints in the best tradition of critical scholarship to imagine a new terrain on which the importance and significance of museum collections can be reassessed in a non-consensual and increasingly globalized and intercultural world.” —Anthony Alan Shelton, Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. CONTENTS Reassembling Ethnographic Museum Collections The “Shuffle of Things” and the Distribution of Agency Reassembling the London Missionary Society Collection: Experimenting with Symmetrical Anthropology and the Archaeological Sensibility Assembling and Governing Cultures “at Risk”: Centers of Collection and Calculation, from the Museum to World Heritage The Sorcery of Sweetness: Intersecting Agencies and Materialities of the 1928 USDA Sugarcane Expedition to New Guinea We’wha Goes to Washington Creative Colonialism: Locating Indigenous Strategies in Ethnographic Museum Collections Exposing the Heart of the Museum: The Archaeological Sensibility in the Storeroom Artifacts in Waiting: Altered Agency of Museum Objects Curating Communities at the Museum of Northern Arizona www.sarpress.org 39 INDIGENOUS STUDIES Remapping Bolivia Resources, Territory, and Indigeneity in a Plurinational State Edited by Nicole Fabricant and Bret Gustafson 2011. 280 pp., figures, maps, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-51-9, $34.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series The 2005 election of Evo Morales to the presidency of Bolivia marked a critical moment of transformation— a coca farmer and peasant union leader became the first indigenous president in the history of the Americas. Gathering work from a new generation of anthropologists and related scholars who have been doing fieldwork in the “post-Evo” era, Remapping Bolivia reflects shifting paradigms in Latin Americanist and indigenousrelated research, which once focused heavily on the “Andean” (lo andino), but now pursue understandings of the effects of human movement and articulation across geographic space and collective cultural and political mobilizations that are reimagining and reshaping the state through multiple forms of grassroots political struggle. Contributors: Nicole Fabricant, Fernando Garcés V., Bret Gustafson, Charles R. Hale, Joshua Kirshner, Pablo Mamani Ramirez, Carlos Revilla, Ximena Soruco Sologuren “Remapping Bolivia establishes a well-balanced articulation of the Andean region with the Amazonian and Chaco lowlands. In this sense, and among other important ways of interpreting the topics studied in this book, remapping Bolivia means rethinking lo andino from the lowlands. This is a novel and useful approach to Bolivian studies, and the book presents original ideas with up-to-date information.” —Javier Sanjines, University of Michigan “Remapping Bolivia is a timely volume that addresses important issues in a Latin American country where social movements have been pioneering new conceptualizations of democracy, autonomy, and indigenous rights over the last decade.” —Lesley Gill, Vanderbilt University Roosters at Midnight Indigenous Signs and Stigma in Local Bolivian Politics Robert Albro 2010. 264 pp., figures, notes, glossary, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-18-2, $34.95 Global Indigenous Politics Series Set in the largely urban provincial capital of Quillacollo, Roosters at Midnight is an ethnographic examination of the changing stories of what it means to be indigenous but also urban in contemporary Bolivia—and in Latin America—in the context of renewed local-level elections after a hiatus of almost forty years. An alternative to more conventional accounts of collective indigenous mobilization in Bolivia during this period, this book is concerned with the lives and careers of the kinds of provincial politicians who opened up local spaces for Bolivia’s present national indigenous project. It examines how problem-solving networks built up in the neoliberal era along the provincial and urban margins and as part of Bolivia’s “politics of the multitude” have made the still contested terms of indigenous belonging more variegated and inclusive. Roosters at Midnight links the present high profile of Bolivia’s national indigenous political project to often overlooked and ongoing, decades-long local political collaborations among people routinely categorized as nonindigenous but “of humble origins.” “Albro’s work provides us with a detailed look at the ways local politics work by following local politicians who must perform on a stage mediated by historical legacies, unspoken prejudices, and complicated gendered enactments. His work follows a long line of political anthropology and makes a timely contribution to the field by showing the intricate relations between political action and cultural notions of value and honor.”—Nancy Postero, University of California, San Diego “In its finely wrought detail, its loving attention to the subtleties of daily interaction, its insightful analysis of the political uses of culture and heritage and genealogy, Roosters at Midnight is like no other ethnography of the Andes that I have read. It is a gem of a book.” —Daniel M. Goldstein, Rutgers University 40 888-390-6070 INDIGENOUS STUDIES War in the Tribal Zone Expanding States and Indigenous Warfare Edited by R. Brian Ferguson and Neil L. Whitehead 1992. 352 pp., figures, maps, appendices, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-80-0, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series 2005 Benjamin Franklin Award, Finalist 2004 Shep Award, Textile Society of America, Winner Weaving Generations Together Evolving Creativity in the Maya of Chiapas Patricia Marks Greenfield Photographs by Lauren Greenfield The Work of Sovereignty Tribal Labor Relations and Self-Determination at the Navajo Nation David Kamper 2010. 272 pp., notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-25-0, $34.95 Resident Scholar Series Who is shaping the future of economic development in Indian Country? Who has a say in tribal economic growth and who benefits? What role do American Indian workers play in shaping how tribal economies and enterprises work? What would it mean to conceive of indigenous self-determination from the vantage point of work and workers? The Work of Sovereignty addresses these vital questions. It explores the political, economic, and cultural forces that structure and influence indigenous economic development, giving special attention to the perspectives and priorities of the indigenous working people who build tribal futures with their everyday labor. Kamper argues for the importance of recognizing tribal labor relations as a factor in indigenous economic enterprises from gaming to health care and beyond. Although most research on tribal sovereignty and economic development focuses on legal theory and governmental operations, The Work of Sovereignty centers on the people who make sovereignty work. It presents a thoughtful, in-depth look at the ways labor relations play out in Indian Country, how tribal employees view their relationships with their bosses and tribal enterprises, and how this view connects to their enactment of indigenous self-determination. “This is a pathbreaking book. In a compelling, nuanced tale, Kamper explores the complex interface between Native American politics and labor politics, between grassroots organizing and legal strategies, and between overlapping identities and oppressions. The Work of Sovereignty is a must-read for anyone in labor studies, Native American studies, and anyone interested in the real world of social justice organizing today.” —Dana Frank, University of California, Santa Cruz “The time is right for a book about tribal labor relations, and there is no one better positioned to write it than David Kamper.” —Jessica Cattelino, UCLA, author of High Stakes: Florida Seminole Gaming and Sovereignty 2004. 224 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, map, notes, references, index, 11 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-28-2, $34.95 Resident Scholar Series Yanomami Warfare A Political History R. Brian Ferguson 1995. 466 pp., maps, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-38-1, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-41-1, $29.95 Resident Scholar Series www.sarpress.org 41 LANGUAGEAND BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY NEW! Anthropology of Race Genes, Biology, and Culture Edited by John Hartigan 2013. 360 pp., figures, map, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-99-1, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series What do we know about race today? After years of debate and inquiry by anthropologists, the question remains fraught with emotion and the answer is complicated and uncertain. Anthropology of Race confronts the challenge of formulating an effective rejoinder to new arguments and new data about race, and attempts to address the intense desire to understand race and why it matters. Contributors: Ron Eglash, Clarence C. Gravlee, John Hartigan, Linda M. Hunt, Christopher W. Kuzawa, Jeffrey C. Long, Pamela L. Sankar, Sandra Soo-Jin Lee, Zaneta M. Thayer, Nicole Truesdell “Anthropology of Race examines the often disregarded intersectionality of genes, biology, and culture in the formation of race. With bold and innovative analysis, the authors challenge us to consider and then reconsider its biosocial and biocultural foundations. This volume creatively adds to the field a complex and provocative interpretation of the anthropology of race.” —Lee D. Baker, Duke University “Mukhopadyay and Moses urged anthropologists in the 1990s to look at the biocultural model as a way to unravel the racial paradigm in the United States. This exceptional, innovative, and carefully crafted volume follows that tradition and takes the notion of the biocultural model to a whole new theoretical and empirical level. It is a timely and very important volume for anthropology and for our society.” —Yolanda T. Moses, UC Riverside “A must-read for scientists and medical practitioners, this volume builds on the vitally important humanistic and social scientific work interrogating racial processes to deconstruct the popular categories that animate our understanding of human difference.” —Deborah A. Thomas, University of Pennsylvania “Especially for those readers most committed to biological authority, these papers that begin by assuming the existence of cogent biological effects of race, might provide a more compelling opportunity for destabliizing race than is the more dichotomous sociocultural critique of race as an impactful myth of racism.” —Michael L. Blakey, NEH Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Institute for Historical Biology, College of William and Mary 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 42 CONTENTS Knowing Race Race, Biology, and Culture: Rethinking the Connections Toppling Typologies: Developmental Plasticity and the Environmental Origins of Human Biological Variation Toward a Cybernetics of Race: Determinism and Plasticity in Ideological and Biological Systems Observations on the Tenacity of Racial Concepts in Genetics Research Genomics Research and Race: Refining Claims about Essentialism Looking for Race in the Mexican “Book of Life”: INMEGEN and the Mexican Genome Project The Political Economy of Personalized Medicine, Health Disparities, and Race The Aimless Genome Conclusion: Anthropology of Race 888-390-6070 LANGUAGEAND BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY Biology, Brains, and Behavior The Evolution of Human Development Edited by Sue Taylor Parker, Jonas Langer, and Michael L. McKinney 2000. 408 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-63-3, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-64-0, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series “[In this volume] evolutionary questions are cast in a developmental context that enriches understanding of both development and evolution.… This book is recommended for specialists…and for generally interested scientists, because of its broad integrative view of emerging fields.” —Dr. Lorraine McCune, Quarterly Review of Biology “This book is essential reading for researchers in the field of human evolution, as well as for those interested in general patterns and processes of behavioural development.” —Dr. P. C. Lee, Journal of Human Evolution “Biology, Brains, and Behavior…is a fertile source of hypotheses for future research and an important addition to the literature devoted to human cognitive evolution.” —Dr. Anne Weaver, Journal of Anthropological Research The Evolution of Human Life History Edited by Kristen Hawkes and Richard R. Paine 2006. 524 pp., figures, tables, appendices, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-72-5, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series The Information Continuum Evolution of Social Information Transfer in Monkeys, Apes, and Hominids Barbara J. King 1994. 166 pp., figures, tables, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-40-4, $19.95 Resident Scholar Series “[Barbara King’s] work is an exceptionally thoughtful synthesis of matters critically relevant to the evolution of human language… [It is] an excellent supplement for studies in anthropology, psychology, primatology, or animal behavior.” —F.S. Szalay, CHOICE “The Information Continuum provides a succinct and thoughtful account of the evolution of social information transfer in monkeys, apes and humans. King’s novel approach to the study of social information transfer offers many new and exciting avenues of research for those interested in the evolution of communication… I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in topics related to information transfer or the evolution of language.” —Dr. Nancy Krusko, International Journal of Primatology “I recommend this book as a provocative and forcefully presented analysis that should be of interest to behavioral primatologists and anthropologists.” —Harold Gouzoules, American Journal of Primatology “[Barbara] King has done an admirable job bringing together data to support a continuity theory of the evolution of information donation in primates. The book is very readable and should enjoy wide readership among primatologists, anthropologists, semioticians, linguists, and others interested in the evolution of human communication.” —John D. Newman, Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease “[T]his nicely produced, well-edited book will make important impacts and should provide a wide range of scholars with solid insights into the evolution of human life histories. It will be a fine resource for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses.” —Steven R. Leigh, American Journal of Human Biology www.sarpress.org 43 LANGUAGEAND BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY The Origins of Language Regimes of Language What Nonhuman Primates Can Tell Us Ideologies, Polities, and Identities Edited by Paul V. Kroskrity Edited by Barbara J. King 1999. 464 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-59-6, $29.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-60-2, $24.95 Advanced Seminar Series 2000. 432 pp., figures, table, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-61-9, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-62-6, $29.95 Advanced Seminar Series The Shape of Script How and Why Writing Systems Change Edited by Stephen D. Houston 2012. 346 pp., figures, tables, notes, references, index, 6 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-42-7, $34.95 Advanced Seminar Series This book builds on earlier projects about the origins and extinctions of script traditions throughout the world in an effort to address the fundamental questions of how and why writing systems change. The contributors—who study ancient scripts from Arabic to Roman, from Bronze Age China to Middle Kingdom Egypt—utilize an approach that views writing less as a technology than as a mode of communication, one that is socially learned and culturally transmitted. Contributors: John Baines, John Bodel, Stephen Chrisomalis, Beatrice Gruendler, Stephen D. Houston, David B.Lurie, John Monaghan, Richard Salomon, Kyle Steinke, Niek Veldhuis “Having edited two valuable collections on how scripts are born (The First Writing) and how they die (The Disappearance of Writing Systems), Stephen Houston has now assembled a third, equally valuable collection, The Shape of Script…. Until quite recently, it was common for most scholars of writing to assume that writing systems must inevitably evolve towards greater efficiency or a more phonemic representation of the languages they express. This somewhat arid view is no longer tenable.… As Houston rightly argues in his Preface, ‘The study of writing needs to be brought back into the fold of anthropology, not as a marginal or recondite specialty but because it is an indispensable tool by which knowledge is transmitted.’ The wide-ranging contributors to this collection respond to this brief with both erudition and imagination.” —Andrew Robinson, author of The Story of Writing, Lost Languages, The Man Who Deciphered Linear B, and Cracking the Egyptian Code “This collection of essays addresses a rarely treated but strategic set of questions. It shows that the study of the evolution of script systems constitutes the best way to understand how aesthetics and script use can shape each other in a cultural tradition, and more generally, how the visual appearance of signs can influence the social use of language. In a very wide range of case studies—from Maya and Mixtec to Latin, Egyptian, Arab, and Chinese—each contributor demonstrates that the ‘shape’ of script has its own levels of analysis from its minute constituents to its broader macro-settings. The Shape of Script is a great attempt to marry an amazing scholarship with an anthropologicallyminded perspective on writing, seen as a culturally-shaped mode of communication and as one of the central cultural productions in human history. It certainly is a stunning achievement.” —Carlo Severi, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris 44 888-390-6070 N AT I V E AMERICAN ART AND 2000 Southwest Books Award, Winner All That Glitters The Emergence of Native American Micaceous Art Pottery in Northern New Mexico Duane Anderson Foreword by Lonnie Vigil 1999. 216 pp., color & black-and-white photos, maps, appendices, notes, bibliography, index, 7 7/8 x 9 1/2 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-53-4, $24.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-58-9, $19.95 Signed copies available “With its numerous excellent photographs, focus on potters, and uncluttered referencing style, the book succeeds as a popular introduction to micaceous art pottery. For those who have more academic interests, the book lays the groundwork for further research on micaceous pottery, documenting micaceous pottery production in the 1990s, and particularly in the four appendixes that inventory museum collections and list potters, suggesting sources for future studies on what came before the 1990s emergence of micaceous art pottery.” —Dennis Gilpin, New Mexico Historical Review “[Duane] Anderson’s well-written narrative, supplemented by magnificent color images …is an essential book for anthropologists, historians, and students of American southwest cultures.” —C. C. Kolb, Choice “All That Glitters is a treasure trove for anyone who loves the culture of the Southwest and the beauty of hand-thrown clay. ” —Alice Auer Connor, The Bloomsbury Review C U LT U R E Art in Our Lives Native Women Artists in Dialogue Edited by Cynthia Chavez Lamar and Sherry Farrell Racette with Lara Evans 2010. 152 pp., color plates, figures, activity section, appendices, notes, references, 8 1/2 x 10 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-934691-36-6, $60.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-37-3, $30.00 Art in Our Lives grew out of the conversations of a group of Native women artists who spoke frankly about the roles, responsibilities, and commitments in their lives while balancing this existence with their art practice. Finding common ground, they started out as a small group of six that eventually grew to eleven who ranged in age from seventy to twenty-seven with backgrounds as diverse as their ages. Together they recognized their experiences, acknowledging that what they shared was not unique to them since other Native women artists could speak to similar life realities. How often such experiences were actually shared became the larger issue. The topics these women thoughtfully discussed resulted in this book at the initiation of the artists, some of whom also contributed essays. The artists participated in three seminars at SAR in 2007–2008 culminating in a one-day exhibition with an artist panel discussion at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture in Santa Fe. Diverse in media and content, their artworks are featured as plates in this volume along with the artist statements that accompanied the pieces in the exhibition. The chapters in this book reflect some of the seminars’ common threads such as home/place, transgression/boundaries, art as healing/art as struggle, pain/joy, art practice/work, and survival/colonization. Contributors: Gloria J. Emerson, Lara Evans, Cynthia Chavez Lamar, Elysia Poon, Sherry Farrell Racette Artists: Heidi K. Brandow (Navajo/Native Hawaiian), Gloria J. Emerson (Diné), Lara Evans (Cherokee), Sherry Farrell Racette (Timiskaming First Nation/Irish), Shannon Letandre (Anishinaabe/Cree), Erica Lord (Athabaskan/Iñupiaq/Finnish/Swedish/English/Japanese), Felice Lucero (San Felipe Pueblo), TahNibaa Naataanii (Diné), Eliza Naranjo Morse (Santa Clara Pueblo), Diane Reyna (Taos Pueblo/Ohkay Owingeh), Dyani Reynolds-White Hawk (Sicangu Lakota/German/Welsh) Publication of this book was made possible by the generous support of the Anne Ray Charitable Trust and the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution. The Anne Ray Charitable Trust also supported the seminars on which this publication is based. “Art in Our Lives: Native Women Artists in Dialogue focuses on the interplay of tradition and contemporary influence...the emphasis is on pluralism rather than defining an indigenous style, voice, or essence, and the beautiful...reproductions allow each artist to speak to readers through her art.”—R. K. Dickson, The Bloomsbury Review www.sarpress.org 45 N AT I V E AMERICAN ART AND C U LT U R E At the Hems of the Lowest Clouds Meditations on Navajo Landscapes Gloria J. Emerson Foreword by N. Scott Momaday 2003. 112 pp., color illustrations, map, 8 1/2 x 9 1/4 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-23-7, $14.95 Signed copies available 2012 New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards, Anthropology/Archaeology Winner 2011 ForeWord Reviews Book of the Year Award, Winner in Social Sciences, Bronze Imprisoned Art, Complex Patronage Plains Drawings by Howling Wolf and Zotom at the Autry National Center Joyce Szabo Foreword by Steven M. Karr 2011. 224 pp., color plates, figures, notes, references, index, 8 1/2 x 10 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-934691-45-8, $60 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-46-5, $30 Two small books of vivid drawings—one filled with images by the Southern Cheyenne warrior-artist Howling Wolf and the other with images by Zotom, a Kiowa man—came to the Southwest Museum of the American Indian, now part of the Autry National Center, in December 1986. Gifts from Leonora Curtin Paloheimo, the books had been commissioned directly from the artists in 1877 by Paloheimo’s grandmother, Eva Scott Muse Fényes (1849–1930). At the time Fényes commissioned the books, Zotom and Howling Wolf were imprisoned at Fort Marion in Saint Augustine, Florida. Like some of the other Southern Plains Indian prisoners held there between mid-1875 and mid-1878, the two men created many drawings for diverse reasons. Some of the prisoners’ books of drawings, including the two that Fényes collected, were sold to people who visited the sixteenth-century Spanish fort. After Eva Scott Fényes’s death, the books went to her daughter, Leonora Muse Curtin (1879–1972), and subsequently they were passed to Leonora Curtin Paloheimo (1903–1999). More than one hundred years after their creation, the books became part of the Southwest Museum’s collections. Unlike most of the museum’s other holdings of Native American art, these two books originated in a specific commission provided by a young woman who continued to be a patron of the arts for the remainder of her life. The study of what has become known as Plains Indian ledger art—because of the artists’ frequent use of accountants’ ledger books as sources of paper—and of Fort Marion drawings in particular has burgeoned in the last forty years. Joyce Szabo’s examination of the two drawing books by Zotom and Howling Wolf takes into account 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. Publication of this book was made possible by the generous support of The Caryll and William Mingst/The Mildred E. and Harvey S. Mudd Publications Fund at the Autry National Center of the American West. 46 888-390-6070 N AT I V E AMERICAN ART AND C U LT U R E Indian Basketry Artists of the Southwest Deep Roots, New Growth Susan Brown McGreevy Foreword by Kevin Navasie 2001. 96 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, map, reading list, 9 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-67-1, $11.95 Indian Painters of the Southwest The Deep Remembering Katherin L. Chase Foreword by Diane Reyna 2002. 96 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, reading list, index, 9 x 9 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-66-4, $11.95 Signed copies available 2005 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award, Winner Mimbres Painted Pottery, Revised Edition J. J. Brody 2004. 264 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, maps, tables, appendices, notes, references, index, 8 x 10 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-66-4, $39.95 Signed copies available Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-27-5, $34.95 Signed copies available This lively, engaging work will interest archaeologists, art historians, and all people who enjoy the beauty of Mimbres pottery. Featuring more than one hundred new illustrations and insights drawn from a lifetime of study and contemplation, this book is much more than a revised edition; it establishes a new standard for the artistic interpretation of a classic Southwestern culture for the new century. “Like its predecessor, this updated study—with its authoritative text and several hundred color and black-and-white illustrations—is the first and last word on Mimbres art and civilization.” —Bruce Dinges, Journal of Arizona History www.sarpress.org 47 N AT I V E AMERICAN ART AND C U LT U R E Mojave Pottery, Mojave People The Dillingham Collection of Mojave Ceramics 2008 New Mexico Book Awards, Arts Winner Talking with the Clay Jill Leslie Furst Photographs by Peter T. Furst The Art of Pueblo Pottery in the 21st Century 2001. 256 pp., color plates, black-and-white illustrations, maps, catalog, notes, references, index, 7 3/4 x 9 1/2 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-55-8, $34.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-65-7, $24.95 20th Anniversary Revised Edition Painting the Underworld Sky Cultural Expression and Subversion in Art Mateo Romero Foreword by Suzan Shown Harjo 2006. 108 pp., color illustrations, black-and-white photos, 8 1/2 x 9 1/4 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-79-4, $34.95 Signed copies available Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-56-5, $29.95 Signed copies available Stephen Trimble 2007. 160 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, map, notes, index, 8 1/2 x 10 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-77-0, $40.00 Signed copies available Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-78-7, $19.95 Signed copies available “This twenty-first century revised edition of Steve Trimble’s Talking with the Clay expands his comprehensive work on Pueblo pottery to include contemporary artists. As with his earlier piece, which offers profound understanding of Pueblo pottery, this work offers intuitive insight into those who are carrying on the tradition today. The potters, both past and present, are talking with the clay. In this book, Steve Trimble listens, and through a lifetime of study and acquired knowledge, conveys the conversation.” —Diego Romero, Cochiti Pueblo potter “Shifting back and forth from respect for tradition to the joy of innovation, the tale is held together by the common love of clay.”— New York Times 1998 Benjamin Franklin Award, Winner Pueblo Indian Painting Tradition and Modernism in New Mexico, 1900–1930 J. J. Brody 1997. 238 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, map, appendices, references, index, 9 x 11 1/2 Cloth, ISBN 978-0-933452-45-9, $39.95 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-46-6, $34.95 Signed copies available 48 888-390-6070 SANTA FE AND THE SOUTHWEST 1999 Benjamin Franklin Award, Winner El Delirio The Santa Fe World of Elizabeth White Gregor Stark and E. Catherine Rayne 1998. 144 pp., black-and-white illustrations, notes, references, index, 7 1/2 x 9 1/4 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-52-7, $19.95 Signed copies available “Extremely well-researched, engaging, and richly illustrated with many previously unpublished photographs, El Delirio provides readers with a feel for the world of the Whites and their friends.… I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in regional history and the history of philanthropists working with Indians.” —Nancy L. Parezo, New Mexico Historical Review 2012 New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards, Arts Winner In the Places of the Spirits David Grant Noble Foreword by N. Scott Momaday 2010. 176 pp., duotone plates, additional photos, notes, 9 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-21-2, $30.00 Signed copies available This book represents the culmination of David Grant Noble’s forty-year career as a fine arts photographer and writer. It features seventy-six photographs of the land, people, and deep past of the Southwest, most published here for the first time. Accompanying these beautiful images are personal reflections interwoven with historical and anthropological information. The moving passages reveal much about the man and the magnificent land that inspires his artistry. These photographs and words portray the land’s soul, the artist’s vision. Through them, the ancient landscapes and peoples of the Southwest tell their tales, display their beauty, remind us that we are only the most recent of many who have lived and been inspired here. “This book is about humanity, timelessness, and place in the American Southwest. Amidst an alternating beat of facts, personal narrative, and photographs of landscapes imprinted with ancient images and ancestral homes, the reader/viewer is engaged in a singular odyssey through centuries and sacred space where the boundaries of time are erased. As David Noble explores the unpredictable and uncertain bridges between past and present, he weaves all of us into a continuous —if not seamless—fabric of being in a moment in time.” —Polly Schaafsma, author of Indian Rock Art of the Southwest “Explorer, writer, and photographer extraordinaire David Grant Noble leads us on an archaeological odyssey through the Southwestern landscape. The spirituality of the places and the Native American inhabitants, both contemporary and ancient, are splendidly captured by Noble’s elegant prose and vivid photographs. In the Places of the Spirits is a very personal chronicle by one of the Southwest’s most sensitive and insightful observers.”—Mark Michel, The Archaeological Conservancy 2008 New Mexico Book Awards, Finalist Kenneth Chapman’s Santa Fe Artists and Archaeologists, 1907–1931 The Memoirs of Kenneth Chapman Edited, annotated, and introduced by Marit K. Munson 2008. 200 pp., figures, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-92-3, $34.95 Resident Scholar Series Arriving in New Mexico in 1899, Kenneth Milton Chapman took on all manner of projects: mapping archaeological ruins, judging Pueblo pottery, teaching art, and studying ancient and modern Indian design. He became an “art archaeologist,” a self-made expert riding the line between disciplines. When he moved to Santa Fe in 1909, he found himself in the midst of the city’s identity crisis. Eventually, he played a part in virtually all of the central institutions and critical events that shaped Santa Fe, but he has remained in the shadows. Munson presents a carefully edited and annotated edition of Chapman’s memoirs. Written in the late 1950s and early 1960s, Chapman’s side of the story is an insider’s take on the personalities and events that shaped Santa Fe. “Munson...has given us an intimate portrait of life in Santa Fe during these turbulent years. For scholars these primary documents allow greater study of an important figure and the beginnings of these influential institutions. For non-scholars, the book offers a fascinating vision of life in New Mexico during this important time. For all readers, Kenneth Chapman’s Santa Fe offers a personal account of life in everyone’s favorite City Different.” —Suzanne Newman Fricke, New Mexico Historical Review www.sarpress.org 49 SANTA FE AND THE SOUTHWEST 2008 New Mexico Book Awards, History Winner A Peculiar Alchemy A Centennial History of SAR 1907–2007 Nancy Owen Lewis and Kay Leigh Hagan Foreword by James F. Brooks 2007. 224 pp., color & duotone illustrations, notes, chronology, documentary lists, index, 8 1/2 x 11 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-930618-84-8, $75.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-85-5, $34.95 BEST SELLER! Santa Fe History of an Ancient City, Revised and Expanded Edition Edited by David Grant Noble BEST SELLER! The People Indians of the American Southwest Stephen Trimble 1993. 536 pp., color & black-and-white photos, maps, notes, index, 7 3/8 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-37-4, $47.00 “Trimble’s book represents the best general introduction to the native peoples of the Southwest that has ever been published. Nor is it good only by comparison: it is a superb book. It combines the traditional concerns of ethnography, ethnohistory, and prehistory with a newer one of letting native voices speak for themselves. More native voices are represented here than in any other book written for a general audience, and this is as it should be.” —Dr. Alfonso Ortiz, author of The Tewa World “There are many reasons to like this book—its highly readable prose style, its fine-art quality photographs, its carefully researched historical agenda, and its personable and perceptive interview quotes.” —Scott Vickers, The Bloomsbury Review “A valuable addition to the library of anyone interested in the Indian cultures of the Southwest. It may well become one of those classics that stay in print forever.” —Tony Hillerman “Many people...consider [this] book to be the best general introduction to the 50 Native American nations dotting the modern American Southwest.” —New Mexico Magazine 2008. 144 pp., color & black-and-white illustrations, reading list, index, 10 x 10 Cloth, ISBN 978-1-934691-03-8, $40.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-04-5, $19.95 In 2010, Santa Fe officially turned 400; four centuries of a rich and contentious history of Indian, Spanish, and American interactions. Pueblo Indians settled along the banks of the Rio Santa Fe as long ago as the sixth century CE. By 1610, Spanish colonists had established the town as a distant outpost in Spain’s expanding empire. Drawing on recent archaeological discoveries and historical research, this updated edition of a classic history details the town’s founding, its survival through revolt and reconquest, its turbulent politics, its lively trade with Mexico and the United States, and the lives of its most important citizens, from the governors Peralta, Vargas, and Armijo to the madam Doña Tules. The origins and transformations of the very building blocks of Santa Fe, from the iconic Palace of the Governors to the city’s acequia (irrigation) system, are revealed in these pages. Contributors: Adrian H. Bustamante, Stanley M. Hordes, John L. Kessell, Janet Lecompte, Frances Levine, David Grant Noble, Tara M. Plewa, Stephen S. Post, Joseph P. Sánchez, Marc Simmons, John P. Wilson “This edition is a must-read for Santa Feans and Santa Fans alike.” —New Mexico Magazine 50 888-390-6070 SANTA FE AND The Santa Fe Fiesta, Reinvented Staking Ethno-Nationalist Claims to a Disappearing Homeland Sarah Bronwen Horton THE SOUTHWEST Spanish-American Blanketry Its Relationship to Aboriginal Weaving in the Southwest H. P. Mera Introduction by Kate Peck Kent 1987. 92 pp., color photos, 8 1/2 x 11 Paper, ISBN 978-0-933452-22-0, $11.95 2010. 256 pp., color plates, appendices, notes, references, index, 7 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-19-9, $24.95 The Santa Fe Fiesta, Reinvented adds a new perspective on the controversial identity formation of New Mexico’s Hispanos. Through close readings of canonical texts by New Mexican historian Fray Angélico Chávez about La Conquistadora, a fifteenth-century Marian icon to whom legend credits Don Diego De Vargas’s “peaceful” resettlement, and through careful attention to the symbolic action of the event, this book explores the tropes of gender, time, genealogy, and sexuality through which this form of cultural nationalism is imagined. Interviews and archival research reveal that even as Hispanos were increasingly minoritized in the former homeland site of Santa Fe, Hispano elites progressively invented and recreated the four cultural organizations that organize the Fiesta to lay claim to this disappearing homeland. With narratives of Fiesta organizers and colorful vignettes of life in contemporary Santa Fe, this book documents Hispanos’ veiled protest of Anglo imperialism and the transformation of this city into what has been called an “Adobe Disneyland.” “This study offers fresh insight into the icons, roles, performances and players that make up the Santa Fe Fiesta. Horton shows how this popular festival has become a symbolic assertion of cultural nationalism in response to the social and economic forces that are driving Hispanos from the gentrified core of the city. The Santa Fe Fiesta, Reinvented is an important contribution to the literature on New Mexico and community festivals that will interest students, scholars, and residents of the region.” —Sylvia Rodríguez, professor emerita, University of New Mexico Sustaining Thought Thirty Years of Cookery at the School for Advanced Research Leslie Shipman with Rosemary Carstens 2007. 218 pp., illustrations, index, 7 1/4 x 10 Paper, ISBN 978-1-930618-83-1, $19.95 “Consider the SAR cookbook an essential planning tool for the casual dinner party…ideal if you’re entertaining out-of-town guests, or planning a retreat for yourself.” —New Mexico Magazine If you will be visiting Santa Fe, check www.sarweb.org for information on lectures, symposiums, artist open houses, colloquiums, and field trips organized by the School for Advanced Research. Go to CALENDAR for all the details on upcoming SAR events. www.sarpress.org 51 TIMELESS CLASSICS SAR Press is proud to continue reviving titles long out-of-print and bringing them to you via a print-on-demand publishing program. These titles have not been modified from the originals and are presented in paperback. As a small scholarly press with a long history of publishing books addressing critical and emerging issues in anthropology and related disciplines, we are pleased to provide our readers access to important books that were previously difficult to find. Please let us know which titles YOU would like to see available once again. Ancient Civilization and Trade Entrepreneurs in Cultural Context New Perspectives on the Pueblos Edited by Jeremy A. Sabloff and C.C. Lamberg-Karlovsky Edited by Sidney M. Greenfield, Arnold Strickon, and Robert T. Aubey Edited by Alfonso Ortiz Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-98-4, $22.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-35-9, $19.00 The Archaeology of Lower Central America Explanation of Prehistoric Change Edited by Frederick W. Lange and Doris Z. Stone Edited by James N. Hill Andean Desert City Explorations in Ethnoarchaeology Edited by Richard A. Gould Edited by Michael E. Moseley and Kent C. Day Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-62-5, $18.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-32-8, $20.00 Late Lowland Maya Civilization The Classic Maya Collapse Edited by T. Patrick Culbert Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-96-0, $20.00 The Origins of Maya Civilization Edited by Richard E. W. Adams Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-50-2, $22.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-97-7, $16.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-31-1, $22.00 Chan Chan Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-95-3, $16.00 Classic to Postclassic Edited by Jeremy A. Sabloff and E. Wyllys Andrews V Photography in Archaeological Research Edited by Elmer Harp Jr. Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-59-5, $23.00 Reconstructing Prehistoric Pueblo Societies Edited by William A. Longacre Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-63-2, $16.00 Shipwreck Anthropology Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-61-8, $23.00 Edited by Richard A. Gould Paper, ISBN 978-1-938645-04-4, $16.00 Edited by Ezra B. W. Zubrow Lowland Maya Settlement Patterns Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-28-1, $17.00 Edited by Wendy Ashmore Edited by Jeremy A. Sabloff Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-34-2, $22.00 Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-58-8, $14 Methods and Theories of Anthropological Genetics Structure and Process in Latin America Edited by M. H. Crawford and P. L. Workman Patronage, Clientage, and Power Systems Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-29-8, $20.00 Edited by Arnold Strickon and Sidney M. Greenfield Demographic Anthropology Quantitative Approaches The Dying Community Edited by Art Gallaher Jr. and Harland Padfield Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-30-4, $17.00 Elites Ethnographic Issues Edited by George E. Marcus Morleyana Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-33-5, $17.00 A Collection of Writings in Memoriam Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-60-1, $20.00 Simulations in Archaeology Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-43-4, $16.00 The Valley of Mexico Studies in Pre-Hispanic Ecology and Society Edited by Eric R. Wolf Paper, ISBN 978-1-934691-57-1, $18.00 52 888-390-6070 S O U T H W E S T CROSSROADS Southwest Crossroads: Cultures and Histories of the American Southwest is a dynamic, interactive, online learning matrix of original texts, poems, fiction, maps, paintings, photographs, oral histories, and films that allows users of all ages to explore the many contentious stories that diverse peoples have used to make sense of themselves and the region. This website was funded under a National Endowment for the Humanities “We the People” grant and created through a partnership between Project Crossroads and the School for Advanced Research. Additional updates have been supported by the SAR President’s Council. The NEH and SAR President’s Council are not responsible for its content. “Traditional Apache Life” Southwest Crossroads Spotlight The Athapaskan peoples migrated south from Alaska and Canada and eventually split into seven distinct groups. By 1500, they occupied a vast expanse of territory in the American Southwest. The extreme environments they inhabited—mountains, deserts, and plains—hardened them into fierce and adaptable nomads. www.southwestcrossroads.org/record.php?num=521 “Hattie Tom (Mescalero Apache),” photographer unknown, courtesy Palace of the Governors (MNM/DCA) #45285. “Settlement and Homesteading in East-Central New Mexico” Southwest Crossroads Spotlight; William Penner New Mexico’s population grew during the nineteenth century. Hispano families began to settle beyond the Rio Grande Valley and establish new villages. Some communities obtained land grants from the Spanish or Mexican governments; others settled without clear title to their homes. www.southwestcrossroads.org/record.php?num=1051 Breaking ground with a two-horse team near Broncho, New Mexico. Photographer unknown, Dorothy Cole personal collection. “Zuni Pottery Designs” Ruth Bunzel, The Pueblo Potter Sedentary people of the Southwest have been making pottery for at least two thousand years. Archaeologists have found more than two hundred sites where people used to live in the Zuni Valley; each ruin holds broken pieces of pottery, or potsherds, that tell a story. www.southwestcrossroads.org/record.php?num=44&hl=zuni::pottery::designs Ruth Bunzel, “Crook with Stripes (netsikawe tsipopa)” Zuni design. From Ruth Bunzel, The Pueblo Potter: A Study of Creative Imagination in Primitive Art (Dover Publications, Inc. 1972 [1929]), 79 Plate XXX. Explore this site: www.southwestcrossroads.org www.sarpress.org 53 AUTHOR INDEX Adams, Origins of Maya Civilization, 52 Adler, Futures of Our Pasts, 21 Albro, Roosters at Midnight, 40 Alt, Medieval Mississippians, 13 Anderson, All That Glitters, 45 Andrews, Copán, 9; Late Lowland Maya Civilization, 52 Ashmore, Lowland Maya Settlement Patterns, 52 Aubey, Entrepreneurs in Cultural Context, 52 Baadsgaard, Breathing New Life, 2 Basso, Senses of Place, 28 Berman, No Deal!, 36 Blackburn, Cowboys & Cave Dwellers, 9 Bornstein, Forces of Compassion, 20 Boutin, Breathing New Life, 2 Buikstra, Breathing New Life, 2 Brenneis, Law & Empire, 32 Brody, Mimbres Painted Pottery, 47; Pueblo Indian Painting, 48 Brooks, Keystone Nations, 22; Small Worlds, 32 Brown, Middle San Juan, 13 Brugge, Navajos in the Catholic Church Records, 14 Bruning, Futures of Our Pasts, 21 Byrne, Reassembling the Collection, 39 Cannell, Vital Relations, 29 Carstens, Sustaining Thought, 51 Chapman, Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Unkar Delta, 7; Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: The Walhalla Plateau, 7 Chase, Indian Painters, 47 Chavez Lamar, Art in Our Lives, 45 Christen, Aboriginal Business, 33 Clarke, Reassembling the Collection, 39 Cobb, Beyond Red Power, 34 Cole, Figuring the Future, 30 Colombi, Keystone Nations, 22 Collins, New Landscapes of Inequality, 23 Conrad, Ideology and Pre-Columbian Civilizations, 13 Crawford, Methods and Theories of Anthropological Genetics, 52 Creamer, Architecture of Arroyo Hondo, 8 Creed, Seductions of Community, 24 Crown, Chaco & Hohokam, 8; Women & Men, 16 Crumley, Historical Ecology, 26 Das, Anthropology/Margins, 26 54 888-390-6070 Day, Chan Chan, 52 Dean, Past Climate of Arroyo Hondo, 15 DeCorse, Small Worlds, 32 del Valle Escalante, Maya Nationalisms, 36 Demarest, Ideology and Pre-Columbian Civilizations, 13 Dickson, Jr., Arroyo Hondo New Mexico Site Survey, 8 di Leonardo, New Landscapes of Inequality, 23 Downey, Cyborgs & Citadels, 26 Downum, Hisat’sinom, 11 Dumit, Cyborgs & Citadels, 26 Durham, Figuring the Future, 30 Eerkens, Evolution of Leadership, 3 Elliott, Great Excavations, 10 Emerson, At the Hems, 46 Evans, Art in Our Lives, 45 Fabricant, Remapping Bolivia, 40 Farmer, Global Health in Times of Violence, 30 Fash, Copán, 9 Feinman, Archaic States, 1 Feld, Senses of Place, 28 Ferguson, War in the Tribal Zone, 41; Yanomami Warfare, 41 Ferry, Timely Assets, 25 Fischer, Pluralizing Ethnography, 38; Cash on the Table, 17 Fish, P., Hohokam Millennium, 12 Fish, S., Hohokam Millennium, 12 Foner, American Arrivals, 17 Fowler, C., Great Basin, 10 Fowler, D., Great Basin, 10 Fowler, L., Beyond Red Power, 34 Fowles, Archaeology of Doings, 7 Fox, Recapturing Anthropology, 28 Franklin, Remaking Life & Death, 24 Freeman, Global Middle Classes, 31 Frehner, Indians & Energy, 22 Furst, J. L., Mojave Pottery, 48 Furst, P. T., Mojave Pottery, 48 Galaty, Archaic State Interaction, 1 Gallaher, Jr., Dying Community, 52 Gamble, Coastal California, 13 Gebauer, Last Hunters, 3 Gould, Explorations in Ethnoarchaeology, 52; Shipwreck Anthropology, 52 Greenfield, L., Weaving Generations Together, 41 Greenfield, P., Weaving Generations Together, 41 Greenfield, S., Entrepreneurs in Cultural Context, 52; Structure and Process in Latin America, 52 Gumerman, Themes in Southwest Prehistory, 16 Gunewardena, Gender of Globalization, 30 Gustafson, Remapping Bolivia, 40 Habicht-Mauche, Pottery from Arroyo Hondo, 15 Hagan, A Peculiar Alchemy, 50 Hale, Más Que un Indio, 35; Otros Saberes, 38 Hansen, Street Economies in the Urban Global South, 28 Harp, Jr., Photography in Archaeological Research, 52 Harris, Faunal Remains from Arroyo Hondo, 10 Harrison, Reassembling the Collection, 39 Hartigan, Anthropolohy of Race, 42 Hawkes, Evolution of Human Life History, 43 Hegmon, Mimbres Lives and Landscapes, 14 Heiman, Global Middle Classes, 31 Hickey, Ambos Nogales, 17 Hoffman, Catastrophe & Culture, 18 Holland, History in Person, 32 Horton, Santa Fe Fiesta Reinvented, 51 Houston, Shape of Script, 44 Hyland, Community Building, 18 Jenkins, Pharmaceutical Self, 24 Johnston, Half-Lives & Half-Truths, 21 Judge, Chaco & Hohokam, 8 Kamper, Work of Sovereignty, 41 Kantner, Evolution of Leadership, 3 Kelley, Contemporary Ecology of AH, 9 Kepp, Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Bright Angel Site, 7; Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Unkar Delta, 7; Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: The Walhalla Plateau, 7 Killion, Opening Archaeology, 15 King, Information Continuum, 43; Origins of Language, 44 Kingsolver, Gender of Globalization, 30 Kirch, Roots of Conflict, 5 Kohler, Model-Based Archaeology, 4 Kroskrity, Regimes of Language, 44 Lang, Faunal Remains from Arroyo Hondo, 10 Lange, Archaeology of Lower Central America, 52 Langer, Biology, Brains, & Behavior, 43 Lave, History in Person, 32 Lekson, Archaeology of Chaco Canyon, 6; History of Ancient Southwest, 12 AUTHOR INDEX Levy, Orayvi Revisited, 37 Lewis, A Peculiar Alchemy, 50 Liebmann, Enduring Conquests, 9 Liechty, Global Middle Classes, 31 Limbert, Timely Assets, 25 Lipe, Arch & Cultural Resource Management, 6 Little, Street Economies in the Urban Global South, 28 Lock, Remaking Life & Death, 24 Longacre, Reconstructing Prehistoric Pueblo Societies, 52 Marcus, G., Critical Anthropology Now, 26; Elites, 52 Marcus, J., The Ancient City, 1; Archaic States, 1 Marshall, Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Bright Angel Site, 7 McGranahan, Imperial Formations, 32 McGreevy, Indian Basketry, 47 McKinney, Biology, Brains & Behavior, 43 McKinnon, Vital Relations, 29 McMullin, Confronting Cancer, 18 McNamara, Dangerous Liaisons, 19 Mera, Spanish-American Blanketry, 51 Merry, Law & Empire in the Pacific, 32 Milgram, Street Economies in the Urban Global South, 28 Mills, Memory Work, 4 Mithlo, Our Indian Princess, 38 Moseley, Chan Chan, 52 Munson, Kenneth Chapman’s Santa Fe, 49 Murphy, Enduring Conquests, 9 Myers, Empire of Things, 26 Nelson, Mimbres Lives and Landscapes, 14 Noble, In Search of Chaco, 13; In the Places of the Spirits, 49; Mesa Verde World, 13; Santa Fe, 50 Oliver-Smith, Catastrophe & Culture, 18; Development & Dispossession, 20 Ortiz, New Perspectives on the Pueblos, 52 Padfield, Dying Community, 52 Paine, Evolution of Human Life History, 43 Paley, Democracy, 19 Palkovich, Pueblo Population and Society, 16 Parker, Biology, Brains & Behavior, 43 Parkinson, Archaic State Interaction, 1 Patterson, Making Alternative Histories, 3 Pauketat, Big Histories, Human Lives, 2; Medieval Mississippians, 13 Perdue, Imperial Formations, 32 Poole, Anthropology in the Margins of the State, 26 Powers, Peopling of Bandelier, 15 Price, Last Hunters, First Farmers, 3 Racette, Art in Our Lives, 45 Rayne, El Delirio, 49 Reed, Middle San Juan, 13 Redfield, Forces of Compassion, 20 Robb, Big Histories, Human Lives, 2 Robinson, Past Climate of Arroyo Hondo, 15 Rodríguez, Acequia, 17 Romero, Painting the Underworld Sky, 48 Rose, Past Climate of Arroyo Hondo, 15 Rosen, Other Intentions, 28 Rothman, Uruk Mesopotamia, 5 Rubenstein, Dangerous Liaisons, 19 Rylko-Bauer, Global Health in Times of Violence, 30 Sabloff, Tikal, 16; The Ancient City, 1; Ancient Civilization and Trade, 52; Late Lowland Maya Civilization, 52; Simulations in Archaeology, 52 Scarborough, Catalyst for Ideas, 3; Flow of Power, 3 Schmidt, Making Alternative Histories, 3; Postcolonial Archaeologies in Africa, 4 Schwartz, Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Bright Angel Site, 7; Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Unkar Delta, 7; Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: The Walhalla Plateau, 7; On the Edge of Splendor, 15 Sebastian, Archaeology & Cultural Resource Management, 6 Shapiro, A Space Syntax Analysis of Arroyo Hondo, 16 Shipman, Sustaining Thought, 51 Smith, Indians & Energy, 22 Spyer, Images That Move, 27 Stafford, Gray Areas, 21 Stark, El Delirio, 49 Steedly, Images That Move, 27 Stephen, Otros Saberes, 38 Stein, Archaeology of Colonial Encounters, 1 Stoler, Imperial Formations, 32 Stone, Archaeology of Lower Central America, 52 Strickon, Entrepreneurs in Cultural Context, 52; Structure and Process in Latin America, 52 Sturm, Becoming Indian, 33 Sweet, Dances of the Tewa Pueblo Indians, 34 Szabo, Imprisoned Art, Complex Patronage, 46 Taylor, Ambos Nogales, 17 Tedlock, Dreaming, 26 Trimble, The People, 50; Talking with the Clay, 48 Tucker, Nature, Science, and Religion, 23 van der Leeuw, Model-Based Archaeology, 4 Van Dyke, Chaco Experience, 8 Vaughn, Evolution of Leadership, 3 Viatori, One State, Many Nations, 37 Walker, Memory Work, 4 Walton, Small Worlds, 32 Watanabe, Pluralizing Ethnography, 38 Watson, Memory, History, and Opposition, 32 Waziyatawin, For Indigenous Eyes Only, 34; For Indigenous Minds Only, 35 Weiner, Confronting Cancer, 18 Wetterstrom, Food, Diet, and Population, 10 Whiteford, L., Global Health in Times of Violence, 30; Globalization, Water, & Health, 31 Whiteford, S., Globalization, Water, & Health, 31 Whitehead, Violence, 25; War in the Tribal Zone, 41 Williams, New Landscapes of Inequality, 23 Williamson, Cowboys & Cave Dwellers, 9 Wolf, The Valley of Mexico, 52 Workman, Methods and Theories of Anthropological Genetics, 52 Yellow Bird, For Indigenous Eyes Only, 34; For Indigenous Minds Only, 35 Yelvington, Afro-Atlantic Dialogues, 32 Zubrow, Demographic Anthropology, 52 www.sarpress.org 55 TITLE INDEX Aboriginal Business P, 33 Acequia P, 17 Afro-Atlantic Dialogues C/P, 32 All That Glitters C/P, 45 Ambos Nogales P, 17 American Arrivals C/P, 17 Ancient City P, 1 Ancient Civilization and Trade P, 52 Anthropology in the Margins C/P, 26 Anthropology of Race P, 42 Archaeology & Cultural Resource Mgmt P, 6 Archaeology of Chaco Canyon P, 6 Archaeology of Colonial Encounters C/P, 1 Archaeology of Doings P, 7 Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Bright Angel Site P, 7 Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: Unkar Delta P, 7 Archaeology of the Grand Canyon: The Walhalla Plateau P, 7 Archaeology of Lower Central America P, 52 Archaic State Interaction P, 1 Archaic States P, 1 Architecture of Arroyo Hondo Pueblo P, 8 Arroyo Hondo New Mexico Site Survey P, 8 Art in Our Lives C/P, 45 At the Hems of the Lowest Clouds P, 46 Becoming Indian P, 33 Beyond Red Power P, 34 Big Histories, Human Lives, P, 2 Biology, Brains & Behavior C/P, 43 Breathing New Life P, 2 Cash on the Table P †, 17 Catalyst for Ideas C/P, 3 Catastrophe & Culture P, 18 Chaco & Hohokam P, 8 Chaco Experience P, 8 Chan Chan P, 52 Classic Maya Collapse P, 52 Coastal California C/P †, 13 Community Building C/P, 18 Confronting Cancer P, 18 Contemporary Ecology of Arroyo Hondo P, 9 Copán P, 9 Cowboys & Cave Dwellers C/P, 9 Critical Anthropology Now C/P, 26 Cyborgs & Citadels C/P, 26 Dances of the Tewa Pueblo Indians P, 34 Dangerous Liaisons P, 19 Democracy P, 19 Demographic Anthropology P, 52 Development & Dispossession P, 20 Dreaming P, 26 Dying Community P, 52 El Delirio P, 49 Elites P, 52 Empire of Things C/P, 26 Enduring Conquests P, 9 Entrepreneurs in Cultural Context P, 52 56 888-390-6070 Evolution Human Life History P, 43 Evolution of Leadership P, 3 Explanation of Prehistoric Change P, 52 Explorations in Ethnoarchaeology P, 52 Faunal Remains from Arroyo Hondo P, 10 Figuring the Future P, 30 Flow of Power P, 3 Food, Diet, and Population P, 10 For Indigenous Eyes Only P, 34 For Indigenous Minds Only P, 35 Forces of Compassion P, 20 Futures of Our Pasts E/P, 21 Gender of Globalization P, 30 Global Health in Times of Violence P, 30 Global Middle Classes E/P, 31 Globalization, Water, & Health C/P, 31 Gray Areas C/P, 21 Great Basin C/P, 10 Great Excavations P, 10 Half-Lives & Half-Truths P, 21 Hisat’sinom C/P, 11 Historical Ecology P, 26 History in Person C/P, 32 History of the Ancient Southwest P, 12 Hohokam Millennium C/P, 12 Ideology & Pre-Columbian P, 13 Images That Move P, 27 Imperial Formations P, 32 Imprisoned Art C/P, 46 In Search of Chaco C/P, 13 In the Places of the Spirits P, 49 Indian Basketry Artists P, 47 Indian Painters P, 47 Indians & Energy P, 22 Information Continuum P, 43 Kenneth Chapman’s Santa Fe P, 49 Keystone Nations P, 22 Last Hunters, First Farmers P, 3 Late Lowland Maya Civilization P, 52 Law & Empire in the Pacific C/P, 32 Lowland Maya Settlement Patterns P, 52 Making Alternative Histories P, 3 Más Que un Indio P, 35 Maya Nationalisms P, 36 Medieval Mississippians C/P †, 13 Memory, History & Opposition C/P, 32 Memory Work P, 4 Mesa Verde World P, 13 Methods and Theories P, 52 Middle San Juan C/P †, 13 Mimbres Lives & Landscapes C/P, 14 Mimbres Painted Pottery C/P, 47 Model-Based Archaeology P, 4 Mojave Pottery C/P, 48 Morleyana P, 52 Nature, Science, and Religion P, 23 Navajos in the Catholic Church Records P, 14 New Landscapes of Inequality P, 23 C= cloth P= paperback E= e-book New Perspectives on the Pueblos P, 52 No Deal! P, 36 On the Edge of Splendor P, 15 One State, Many Nations P, 37 Opening Archaeology P, 15 Orayvi Revisited C/P, 37 Origins of Language C/P, 44 Origins of Maya Civilization P, 52 Other Intentions C/P, 28 Otros Saberes P †, 38 “Our Indian Princess” P, 38 Painting the Underworld Sky C/P, 48 Past Climate of Arroyo Hondo P, 15 Peculiar Alchemy C/P, 50 People, The P, 50 Peopling of Bandelier P, 15 Pharmaceutical Self P, 24 Photography in Archaeological Research P, 52 Pluralizing Ethnography C/P, 38 Postcolonial Archaeologies in Africa P, 4 Pottery from Arroyo Hondo Pueblo P, 15 Pueblo Indian Painting C/P, 48 Pueblo Population and Society P, 16 Reassembling the Collection P †, 39 Recapturing Anthropology P, 28 Reconstructing Prehistoric Pueblo Societies P, 52 Regimes of Language C/P, 44 Remaking Life & Death C/P, 24 Remapping Bolivia P, 40 Roosters at Midnight P, 40 Roots of Conflict P, 5 Santa Fe C/P, 50 Santa Fe Fiesta Reinvented P, 51 Seductions of Community C/P, 24 Senses of Place P, 28 Shape of Script P, 44 Shipwreck Anthropology P, 52 Simulations in Archaeology P, 52 Small Worlds P, 32 Space Syntax Analysis of Arroyo Hondo P, 16 Spanish-American Blanketry P, 51 Street Economies P †, 28 Structure and Process in Latin America P, 52 Sustaining Thought P, 51 Talking with the Clay C/P, 48 Themes in Southwest Prehistory P, 16 Tikal P, 16 Timely Assets P, 25 Uruk Mesopotamia P, 5 Valley of Mexico P, 52 Violence C/P, 25 Vital Relations P, 29 War in the Tribal Zone P, 41 Weaving Generations Together P, 41 Women & Men Prehispanic Southwest C/P, 16 Work of Sovereignty P, 41 Yanomami Warfare P, 41 †= forthcoming ORDERING INFORMATION SAR PRESS P.O. 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