• Graduate Students Recognized by MSU Museum

    MSU Museum highlighted two Department of Anthropology students this semester as their “Featured Students.” Both Blair Zaid and Grace Krause are PhD. candidates in archaeology.

    photo of Blair ZaidBlair Zaid, a Ph.D. Candidate in both African American and African Studies (AAAS) and Anthropology, received both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Michigan State University. For the past two years Ms. Zaid managed the volunteers and curation projects for the anthropology and archaeology collections at the MSU Museum under the supervision of Dr. William Lovis. Work with archaeological collections inspires her because it offers an opportunity to learn about a wide breath of Michigan historical and prehistorical topics, something she does not focus on in her own research, while helping students to develop a curiosity for archaeology and human cultures. Blair’s doctoral research is focused on the early Iron Age Bantu speaking people of west Africa, particularly the settlement strategies in the Congo River Basin and broader patterns of prehistoric cultural change in Africa and the African Diaspora. In addition to her research, she enjoys teaching, participating in the MSU Museum’s Annual Darwin Discovery Day, and visiting the MSU Museum with her family.

    photo of Grace KrausGrace Krause completed her bachelor’s degree in anthropology from The University of Chicago. Ms. Krause has been working in museums such as The Field Museum and The Oriental Institute in Chicago for over a decade. She began volunteering at the MSU Museum in 2011, and then working there in 2012 as the coordinator of the Human Ancestors Program. Grace is also the chair of the Mid-Michigan Graduate Women in Science Mentoring Program. Ms. Kraus plans to complete her Ph.D. in Anthropology during next academic year. Her dissertation looks at foodways in the historical period in New Orleans.

     

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  • Undergraduate Research Symposium and Showcase

    photo of msu anthropology undergraduate research symposium
    2017 Department of Anthropology Undergraduate Research Symposium

    The Department of Anthropology held its First Annual Anthropology Research Symposium and Showcase for Undergraduate Students on Thursday, December 7th from 6:30 – 8:30 pm. The idea for this symposium blossomed out of conversations between Dr. Fredy Rodriquez and the department chair, Dr. Jodie O’Gorman, about the need to create an open house for our undergraduate students to show off their hard work and excite other students about research. The two quickly agreed that a research symposium and showcase would be the most beneficial for students as a supportive audience of peers, friends, parents and faculty would provide an opportunity for exchange and feedback. Many of the participants then turned their presentations into entries in the larger University Undergraduate Research and Arts Forum.

    undergraduate explains his research poster to an onlooker
    Mike Gates explains his research, “Lithic Analysis of the Perrin Mink Farm Site.”

    The Anthropology Research Symposium and Showcase offers an opportunity for parents, friends and others to learn more about our undergraduate students’ independent work and collaboration with faculty and graduate students around the university. All anthropology majors, minors and those who had collaborated on anthropological research initiatives with faculty members or independently were invited to participate. The student research projects were displayed in recorded Power Point and poster presentation formats. Dr. Rodriguez and other faculty members mentored students who had never had the occasion to share their research prior to the event. Twenty projects in all were showcased at the 2017 Symposium with research topics ranging from medical anthropology, archaeology, forensic anthropology, sociocultural anthropology, and social media anthropology. Light snacks and coffee were provided, and we are happy to announce that we received close to 120 attendees.

    undergraduate stands by her research poster
    Amy Hair presents her photogrammetry work, “Craniometric Analysis Using 3D Modeling.”

     

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  • Social Science Week Premieres

    Dr. Lovis gives remarks on Becca Albert’s achievements as she receives the Outstanding Senior Award for Anthropology at the Annual Student Achievement Gala of the College of Social Science
    Dr. Lovis gives remarks on Becca Albert’s achievements as she receives the Outstanding Senior Award for Anthropology at the Annual Student Achievement Gala of the College of Social Science

    Michigan State University College of Social Science Week premiered this year as an initiative through the new Dean of the College of Social Science, Dr. Rachael Croson, to “transform our students’ experience.” Its mission was to connect faculty and students with business, community, and alumni leaders. Social Science Week was envisioned as an ideal way to bring executives to the University campus and give them the opportunity to become engaged or re-engage with their college and university communities. This opportunity allows them a spotlight to educate, share, and encourage a promising new generation of Spartan leaders.

    Social Science Week gave students an opportunity to meld theory with application. Guest speakers had a chance to share their experiences and present case studies from their companies or their personal experiences as they engaged with students during regular undergraduate social science classes.

    Throughout the week, alumni and guest speakers were given the opportunity to highlight their Social Science Week experience at events such as alumni award dinners, scholarship receptions, a Berkey Hall Society pinning, a Woman’s Leadership Institute, Classes Without Quizzes and more.

    Dr. William Lovis and PhD candidates Kate Frederick and Susan Kooiman attend the Endowed Scholarship Luncheon

     

    Dr. Dean Anderson (PhD 1992) and Donald Weir (MA 1979), both alumni of the Department of Anthropology’s archaeology program, were invited to speak in undergraduate archaeology courses during the Professor for a Day event about how their time at MSU helped them achieve their successful careers and to provide insights into careers in archaeology. Don Weir is the former owner (now retired) of Commonwealth Cultural Heritage Group, a successful cultural resource management firm with multiple offices across the U.S., that has employed many graduates from our program. Dr. Anderson, State Archaeologist for Michigan, said that he was thrilled to have the opportunity to give back to his alma mater and he enjoyed meeting with the students and discussing his time at MSU. The department thanks both alums for their participation in the event and their ongoing support.

    msu social science week logo

     

     

     

     

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  • Outstanding Senior, Becca Albert

    Becca Albert in front of her research posterThe Department of Anthropology is pleased to announce Rebecca K. Albert (aka Becca) as our Outstanding Senior in Anthropology for the class of 2018. Each department in the College of Social Science selects one graduating senior who is the first to walk across the stage at graduation and attend the Outstanding Senior Ball held in their honor. Becca was selected based on her GPA, her inclusion in the Honors College, her standing as current President of the Anthropology Club, and her extensive independent research resulting in a number professional conference and on-campus presentations, as well as first authorship on a research article in a top peer-reviewed journal.

    Ms. Albert credits Dr. Lovis, Dr. Goldstein, and graduate student Susan Kooiman with helping shape her undergraduate experience. Working with Dr. Lovis and Susan allowed her to narrow down her research interests and learn about archaeological sciences. Through Dr. Goldstein and the Campus Archaeology Program, Becca gained the experience necessary for being a well-rounded archaeologist which led to an interest in working in CRM. Becca feels these mentors fostered her success by pushing her to be the best researcher and scientist she could be. Coming from the Honors College, she received a two-year Professorial Assistantship during her freshman year, choosing to work with Dr. William Lovis on the analysis of microscopic plant remains embedded in burned-on foods adhering to the interiors of pottery. Ultimately, this led to an independent research project that interfaced with dissertation work being conducted by Susan Kooiman. Rebecca’s research revealed evidence for the earliest use of corn in the northern Great Lakes 2,000 years ago.

    Dr. Lovis gives remarks on Becca Albert’s achievements as she receives the Outstanding Senior Award for Anthropology at the Annual Student Achievement Gala of the College of Social Science
    Dr. Lovis gives remarks on Becca Albert’s achievements as she receives the Outstanding Senior Award for Anthropology at the Annual Student Achievement Gala of the College of Social Science

    Becca presented the results of her work at multiple University Undergraduate Research and Arts Forum (UURAF), at regional professional meetings, and eventually at the national Society for American Archaeology Annual Meeting where she won the SAA/Institute for Field Archaeology Best Student Paper Award. Her research, “Earliest Microbotanical Evidence for Maize in the Northern Lake Michigan Basin” was recently published in the leading international refereed archaeology journal, American Antiquity, with Becca as lead author. Building on this platform, Becca then proposed comparative research on a second group of ceramics and was awarded a College of Social Science Dean’s Assistantship, again teaming up with Susan Kooiman, and again revealing significant microbotanical information about the timing for use of corn, squash, and wild rice in the Straits of Mackinac region. The merging of research on food, laboratory work and being outside, are her favorite things about studying archaeology. Ms. Albert hopes her research will help further the idea that diet in the past was far more varied than history suggests, and that people were communicating across broad networks very early on.

    Becca enjoys knitting and crocheting, and also hiking or skiing, depending on the weather. She was excited to finally see the printed version of her article in American Antiquity. Becca plans to attend graduate school, complete her PhD and eventually work in academia.

     

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  • Anthropology Graduating Senior Breanna Escamilla delivers MSU College of Social Science Spring 2018 Student Commencement Speech

    undergraduate Breanna Escamilla in cap and gownMs. Breanna Escamilla was chosen as the MSU College of Social Science Spring 2018 Student Commencement Speaker. Breanna majored in anthropology with a focus on sociocultural studies as well as completing a double minor in Chicano/Latino Studies and African American/ African Studies.

    During her time at MSU, she has participated in various civic engagement activities including volunteering at Detroit Public Schools. Ms. Escamilla is a sister in the first Latina based sorority in the country, Lambda Theta Alpha and holds two jobs on campus.

    Working with people and woman of color such as herself inspires her to tell her own story and this is ingrained in her love for the social sciences because she feels that every major, minor and specialization is a way to tell someones’ own story. Breanna will attend the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign to pursue her PhD.

    Click here to view Breanna’s story featured in MSU Today.

     

    Click here to read the rest of the Spring 2018 newsletter.

  • Marcela Omans Awarded NSF

    Marcela Omans Awarded NSF

    Marcella OmansCongratulations to Marcela Omans for her NSF Graduate Research Fellowship she received for her project entitled “La Mesa Barrio Chino, Tijuana, Mexico: China’s Gateway to Latin America.”

    Her work focuses on providing insight into how newly arrived Chinese immigrants and business people leverage preexisting Chinese networks to gain economic footholds in Latin America; and on revealing how perceived Chinese identity in Latin America and the mediation of the expectations associated with this have shaped the Sino-Latin American narrative. In recent decades, Chinese corporations, communities, and individuals have increasingly looked beyond national borders for new economic opportunities. This shift was heralded by China’s joining the World Trade Organization (2001) and implementation of policies which encourage and incentivize overseas investment and migration. Scholars across many disciplines are beginning to study this increase in transnational activities by Chinese entities, including Chinese exchanges with Latin America. Although Latin American connections with China date back to the 1800s, this recent era of engagement is by far the most robust. Currently, much of the Sino-Latin American literature is focused on macro-level global processes such as trade, flow of Foreign Direct Investment, diplomacy implications, and the greater South-South cooperation narrative. However, we must recognize the role that local ethnic Chinese networks in Latin America play in shaping these activities and their overall success and visibility (DeHart, 2015). To date, research looking at these more localized, transnational Sino-Latin American relationships has been limited.

    Through her NSF funding, she plans to conduct multilingual (Spanish and Mandarin Chinese) ethnographic fieldwork in La Mesa Barrio Chino, Tijuana, Mexico to provide an example of the growing Sino-Latin American relationship in a local context. La Mesa Barrio Chino currently has an estimated Chinese population of 15,000 people which has more than tripled since 2009. These communities include a pastiche of new and old immigrant communities as well as the local Mexican community. Located in northern Mexico, this community is strategically placed on the border with the United States and near the many factories that span the Mexican countryside. Subsequent to the establishment of a direct flight route from Shanghai to Tijuana in 2008, this site has become a gateway for both newly arrived individual immigrants and wealthy Chinese business people. Thus, it presents a good case study of this wave of Sino-Latin American engagement and the effects it will have on investment and development in the region. The success of newly arrived migrants and business people is not only contingent on their own social fields but also on the urban planning and economic development policies implemented by the local, regional and national government. Her research will be divided into a summer of preliminary pilot fieldwork followed by a full year of fieldwork.

    Marcela’s work will help inform those who are concerned with the growing relationship between China and Mexico and its potential impacts on the community and region. This includes scholars and policymakers concerned with trade, urban planning and development, urban diversity and attracting foreign investment.

    We wish Ms. Omans safe travels as she begins her dissertation research.

  • Fieldwork Photography Contest Winners 2018

    Fieldwork Photography Contest Winners 2018

    We would like to thank everyone who entered. The photos were amazing as always.

     

    1st Place

    Fishing Inle Lake; Myanmar, 2017

    Edward Glayzer; Graduate Student

    a man fishing in Inle Lake, Myanmar
    Fishing Inle Lake

    2nd Place

    A Parade in Began; Myanmar, 2017

    Edward Glayzer; Graduate Student

    A colorful parade in Began, Myanmar
    A Parade in Began

     

    3rd Place

    Reading Aloud in Fon; Benin, 2018

    Marcy O’Neil; Faculty

    A girl reading aloud in Fon, Benin
    Reading Aloud in Fon

     

    Congratulations to all of our winners!

     

    Click here to read the 2018 Spring newsletter.

  • Undergraduate Becca Albert publishes prestigious article

    Undergraduate Becca Albert publishes prestigious article
    Becca Alberts performing macrobotanical analysis
    Undergraduate Becca Alberts analyzing macrobotanicals for Susan Kooiman

    The Department of Anthropology would like to congratulate undergraduate Becca Albert on her outstanding research. She is the Anthropology Senior of the Year, an award given yearly by our department to a graduating senior. Last week she won first place in her section at the Michigan State University Undergraduate Research and Arts Forum, and she is lead author on a brand new American Antiquity article entitled “Earliest Microbotanical Evidence for Maize in the Northern Lake Michigan Basin.” Great job on all of you hard work Becca!

  • Full-time, non-tenure track Assistant Professor Job Posting

    The Department of Anthropology at Michigan State University invites applications for a full-time, non-tenure track Assistant Professor position. The appointment will begin August 16, 2018 and be renewable annually. Our faculty envision this as a teaching professor position focused on excellence in the anthropology classroom. This individual will play a key role in the advancement of undergraduate learning in the department.

    The successful candidate should possess the qualifications and skills necessary to teach an array of large and small undergraduate courses, mixed (hybrid) courses, and fully online formats in all the department’s sub-disciplines, have evidence of strong teaching skills and be able to demonstrate their commitment to teaching excellence. This position will normally teach 4 classes (usually 2-3 preps) per semester, with an annual course release negotiable and based on other contributions, such as working with the undergraduate anthropology club and organizing the department’s annual undergraduate research showcase. Teaching assignments are based on the needs of the department. MSU provides opportunities and resources to support faculty advancement in instructional development.

    We seek a candidate with an engaged, innovative and thoughtful approach to teaching a large and diverse student body who is committed to student success.

    To view a full posting of this job (497448), including deadlines and requirements, visit careers.msu.edu and search for job listing 497448. Alternatively, visit http://careers.msu.edu/cw/en-us/job/498957/assistant-professorfixedterm directly.

  • Dr. Rowenn Kalman receives Gill-Chin Lim Award

    Dr. Rowenn Kalman receives Gill-Chin Lim Award

    Dr. Medina and Dr. Kalmann with Dr. Kalmann's awardOur own recent graduate and adjunct faculty, Dr. Rowenn Kalman has been awarded the Gill-Chin Lim Award for Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation in Global Studies from the MSU International Studies and Programs. This award, given every academic year, acknowledges a graduate student for their outstanding doctoral dissertation. The dissertation submitted had to be completed the preceding year of the award, and must focus on global studies. This award is named after the late Dr. Gill-Chin Lim, MSU Professor of Geography and Urban Planning and Dean of International Studies and Programs. MSU faculty, as well as from deans, directors, chairpersons, and academic advisors, nominate students from across the university for the Gill-Chin Lim Award for Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation in Global Studies.

    Dr. Rowenn Kalman received her degree this past May of 2017. Her dissertation entitled “‘Conciencia’ for Conservation: Andean Indigeneity, Economic Rationalism, Technical Science and the Production of Diverse Subjectivities through Rural Stewardship in Ancash, Peru” examined the need for a new scholarly approach to subjectivity and environmental governance through the analysis of the broader context of competing discourses and multifaceted identities that lead rural stewards to engage in diverse, strategic, and sometimes ambivalent ways.

    Rowenn received multiple fellowships and recognition during her time as a graduate student in our department including: Foreign Language and Area Studies to learn Quechua, an International Studies Program pre-dissertation research grant, a Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Research Fellowship and GenCen’s Rita Gallin Award for best graduate student paper on gender.

    Dr. Kalman received her award at the awards ceremony on March 29th. Congratulations Dr. Kalman on your outstanding dissertation research and your award.

     

    Click here to read the 2018 Spring newsletter.