The Ethics of Anthropology and Amerindian Research Reporting on Environmental Degradation and Warfare /
The decision to publish scholarly findings bearing on the question of Amerindian environmental degradation, warfare, and/or violence is one that weighs heavily on anthropologists. This burden stems from the fact that documentation of this may render indigenous communities vulnerable to a host of pre...
Συγγραφή απο Οργανισμό/Αρχή: | |
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Άλλοι συγγραφείς: | , |
Μορφή: | Ηλεκτρονική πηγή Ηλ. βιβλίο |
Γλώσσα: | English |
Έκδοση: |
New York, NY :
Springer New York,
2012.
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Έκδοση: | 1. |
Θέματα: | |
Διαθέσιμο Online: | Full Text via HEAL-Link |
Πίνακας περιεχομένων:
- Shepard Krech III (Brown University) “Foreword.” 1. Richard J. Chacon (Winthrop University) and Rubén G. Mendoza (California State U. Monterey Bay) “Introduction.”-.2. Christopher W. Schmidt (University of Indianapolis) and Rachel A. Lockhart Sharkey (University of Indianapolis) “Ethical and Political Ramifications of the Reporting/Non-reporting of Native American Ritualized Violence.”
- 3. Charles R. Cobb (South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology) and Dawnie Wolfe Steadman (Binghamton University) “Pre-Columbian Warfare and Indecorous Images in Southeastern North America.”.-4. David H. Dye (University of Memphis) and M. Franklin Keel (Bureau of Indian Affairs) “The Portrayal of Native American Violence and Warfare: Who Speaks for the Past?”
- 5. Brooke Bauer (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) “Catawba Indians’ Adaptive Response to Colonialism.”.-6. Kitty F. Emery (Florida Museum of Natural History) and Linda Brown (George Washington University) “Maya Hunting Sustainability: Perspectives From Past and Present.”.-7. Arthur A. Demarest (Vanderbilt) and Brent Woodfill (U. of Louisiana, Lafayette) “Sympathetic Ethnocentrism, Repression, and Auto-repression of Q’eqchi’ Maya Blood Sacrifice.”.-8. Richard D. Hansen (Idaho State University) “Relativism, Revisionism, Aboriginalism, and Emic/Etic Truth: The Case Study of Apocalypto.”.-9. Rubén G. Mendoza (California State U. Monterey Bay) and Shari René Harder (California State U. Monterey Bay) “Mythologies of Conquest: Demystifying Amerindian Warfare and European Triumphalism in the Americas.”.-10. John W. Hoopes (University of Kansas) “Imagining Human Alteration of Ancient Landscapes in Central and South America.”.-11.Dennis E. Ogburn (UNC Charlotte) “Overstating, Downplaying and Denying Indigenous Conquest Warfare in Prehispanic Empires of the Andes.”.-12. Elizabeth Arkush (University of Pittsburg) “Violence, indigeneity, and archaeological interpretation in the central Andes.”.-13. Richard J. Chacon (Winthrop University) “Conservation or Resource Maximization? Analyzing Subsistence Hunting Among the Achuar (Shiwiar) of Ecuador.”
- 14. Robert L. Carneiro (American Museum of Natural History). “The Studied Avoidance of War as an Instrument of Political Evolution.”
- 15. John Walden (Marshall University School of Medicine) “Medical Ramifications of Failing to Acknowledge Amerindian Warfare, Violence, Social Inequality and Cultural Enigmas.”.-16. Antonio Chavarria (Museum of Indian Arts and Culture) and Rubén G. Mendoza (California State U. Monterey Bay). “Ancestral Pueblos and Modern Diatribes: An Interview with Antonio Chavarria of Santa Clara Pueblo, Curator of Ethnology, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, Santa Fe, New Mexico.”
- 17. Alberto Esquit-Choy (Kaqchikel Maya Foundation) “Indigenous Peoples and Environmental Degradation: An Indigenous Perspective.”
- 18. M. Gregory Oakes (Winthrop University) “The Logic of Indigenous Voice.”.-19. Richard J. Chacon (Winthrop University) and Rubén G. Mendoza (California State U. Monterey Bay) “Discussion and Conclusions.”.-.