<<

Ann M. Kakaliouras, Ph.D. Associate Professor of , Whittier College

Department of Anthropology Phone: 562.907.4200, ext. 4341 Whittier College Fax: 562.464.4517 13406 Philadelphia St email: [email protected] Box 634 web: http://www.whittier.edu/academics/anthropology/kakaliouras Whittier, CA 90608

Academic Positions: Jul 2011 – present Whittier College, Department of Anthropology Associate Professor Jul 2006 – Jul 2011 Whittier College, Department of Anthropology Assistant Professor

Jul 2004 – Jul 2006 Appalachian State University, Department of Anthropology Assistant Professor (tenure track) --Faculty in Women’s Studies, Appalachian State University --Faculty in Internet Studies, Appalachian State University --Graduate Faculty, Appalachian State University

Jul 2003 – Jul 2004 Appalachian State University, Department of Anthropology Visiting Assistant Professor

Education: 1995 – 2003 Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Anthropology Granted 18 August 2003.

Dissertation: Biological Distance and the Ethnolinguistic Classification of Late Woodland (AD 800-1650) Native Americans on the Coast of North Carolina. Under the direction of Drs. Clark S. Larsen and Vincas P. Steponaitis

1989 – 1993 B.A., Summa Cum Laude, Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota. Major: Anthropology. Minors: Art History and Women’s Studies.

Publications:

2014 “Archiving Anthropos: Tracking the Ethics of Collections across History and Anthropology” (with Joanna Radin) and “When Remains are “Lost”: Thoughts on Collections, Repatriation, and Research in American Physical Anthropology,” Curator: The Museum Journal 57:2, pp. 147-151 and 213-223 (special issue co-editor).

2012 “An Anthropology of Repatriation: Contemporary Physical Anthropological and Native American Ontologies of Practice,” Current Anthropology Vol 53, Number S5, pp. S210-S221.

2010 “Race is…Only as Race does: Essentialism and Ethnicity in (Bio) and Skeletal Biology, Dongoske, K. and Zimmerman, L. (eds.) Invited contribution for SAA (Society for American Archaeology) Archaeological Record issue on “Race and Racialism in American Archaeology.”

2008 “Kennewick Man: A Virtual Political Object ‘Under Construction.” In Burke, H. (ed.) Kennewick Man: Perspectives on the Ancient One. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press, pp. 88-93

2008 “Leaving few bones unturned: recent work on repatriation by osteologists.” American Anthropologist 110:1(44-52).

2008 “Toward a new and different osteology: A reflexive critique of physical anthropology in the United States since the passage of NAGPRA.” In Killion, Thomas, ed. Opening Archaeology: Repatriation’s Impact on Contemporary Research and Practice. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press, pp.109-129.

2006 “Feminist Pedagogy in .” In Gellar P. and M. Stockett (eds.) Feminist Anthropology: Past, Present and Future. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 143-155.

2004 “Ethnicity and Race in Anthropology.” In Horowitz, M.A. (ed.) New Dictionary of the History of Ideas, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2004. pp. 716-720.

2002 “Late Woodland Coastal NC Dental Metrics.” In Hutchinson, D.L., Foraging, Farming and Coastal Adaptation in Late Prehistoric North Carolina, Gainesville: University Press of Florida. pp. 218-227.

1998 Cone, C.A. and A.M. Kakaliouras, “The Quest for Purity, Stewardship of the Land, and Nostalgia for Sociability: Resocializing Commodities Through Community Supported Agriculture. In Gilman, Steve (ed.) CSA Network, Volume II, Stillwater, NY: CSA Farm Network, pp. 26-29.

1995 Cone, C.A. and A.M. Kakaliouras, “Community Supported Agriculture: Building Moral Community or an Alternative Consumer Choice?” Culture and Agriculture 51/52:28-31.

Grants and Awards Received: 2012 Two Month Residental Fellowship at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin

2012 Graves Award in the Humanities, Pomona College

2006-7, 10 Faculty Research Grant and Teaching Development Grants, Whittier College.

2006 Library Resident Research Fellowship, American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, PA

2005 University Research Council Faculty Research Grant for summer 2006, Appalachian State University.

2004 University Research Council Faculty Research Grant for summer 2005, Appalachian State University. 2004 Teaching Enhancement Grant, Appalachian State University.

2003 Manning Award, UNC-Chapel Hill Department of Anthropology for outstanding dissertation.

2001 Research Grant, Center for the Study of the American South, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Laboratory and archival research towards dissertation completion.

2000 UNC/IBM Information Technology Development Grant for encouraging innovative use of technology in the classroom. Produced course web site and interactive online discussion venue.

Kakaliouras, cv - 2 1999-2002 Graduate Teaching Fellowships, Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

1995-1999 University of North Carolina Graduate School Teaching Assistantships (during academic school years).

1994 Bush Foundation Summer Research Grant for work on MN Native American Reburial Project.

1993 Belle and Leland Cooper Award for Professional Promise in Anthropology, Hamline University.

1992 Amy B. Russell Award for a Student in the Social Sciences, Hamline University. Alan T. Bluhm Award for Outstanding Junior, Hamline University.

Grants Submitted: 2011 Summer NEH Fellowship – nominated as senior representative from Whittier College

2006 Long-Term Newberry Library Fellowship – alternate for six-month Monticello award

2004 National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Stipend, 2005 – junior scholar nominated by Appalachian State University to submit a proposal

Scholarly Papers: 2014 Theory in the of community: potentials, pitfalls, and the “population problem.” Paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology Conference, Austin, Texas, April 23- 27.

2013 Native Americans in the anthropological imaginary: how did physical anthropologists create and use their own disciplinary “Indian” and what can we do about it? Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association national meetings, November 20-24.

2011 ‘Matters of care and concern’: lessons for anthropological genetics from osteology’s repatriation and NAGPRA experience. Invited paper presented for the American Association for Anthropological Geneticists Ethics Panel. Meetings of the American Association for Physical Anthropology, Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 13-16.

2010 An anthropology of repatriation: contemporary indigenous and biological anthropological ontologies of practice. Invited paper presented at Wenner-Gren International Symposium 142: The Biological Anthropology of Modern Human Populations: World Histories, National Styles, and International Networks. Hotel Rosa dos Ventos, near Teresópolis, Brazil, March 5-12, 2010

2007 Native Americans and early 20th century narratives of biological authenticity: the making and unmaking of the anthropological category “Chippewa,” Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory Conference, Tulsa, Oklahoma, (November). Panel: Beyond the field vs. the archive: Ethnohistory as a tool for discursive critique and change, Ann M. Kakaliouras, organizer.

2006 “The Measure of Difference: Constructing “Normality” in American skeletal biology and bioarchaeology,” Paper Presented at the American Anthropological Association national meeting, San Jose, CA. Panel: Transforming Biological Anthropology: Interdisciplinary Intersections and Theoretical Innovation, Ann M. Kakaliouras, Pamela Gellar and Rachel Watkins, co-organizers.

Kakaliouras, cv - 3

2005 “From Paleoindians to Paleoamericans: The shifting landscape of ancient Native identities and the politics of physical anthropological classification.” Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association national meeting, Washington, D.C.

2005 “Biodistance, regional gene flow and the ossuary tradition on the Late Woodland (AD 800- 1650) North Carolina coast.” Paper presented at the American Association of Physical Anthropologists Annual Meeting, Milwaukee, WI.

2004 “The Possibilities of a Bioarchaeology Informed by Native American-oriented Ethnohistory: A Case from the American Southeast.” presented at the American Anthropological Association National Meetings, Atlanta, GA.

2003 “The Late Woodland North Carolina Coast in Bioarchaeological Perspective.” Paper presented at the Society of American Archaeology meetings, Milwaukee, WI.

2001 “The Public Face of Physical Anthropology: Toward a Radical Pedagogy of Human Biocultural Evolution.” Paper presented at the 2001 American Anthropological Association National Meetings, Washington, D.C.

Kakaliouras, A.M., D.H. Hutchinson and L. Norr, “Biodistance and Regional Subsistence Patterns for the Late Woodland North Carolina Coast.” Paper Presented at the Seventieth Annual Meetings of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Kansas City, MO.

Higginbotham, L. and A.M. Kakaliouras, “Gender-Specific Dental Health and Adaptation Patterns in Late Woodland Coastal North Carolina.” Paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology Meetings, New Orleans, LA.

2000 “The Construction of a Political Object: The Case of Kennewick Man.” Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association National Meetings, San Francisco, CA.

1999 Kakaliouras, A.M. and D.L. Hutchinson, “Cultural and Biological Relationships Between Three Late Woodland Populations on the North Carolina Coastal Plain.” Paper presented at the American Association of Physical Anthropologists National Meetings, Columbus, OH.

1998 “Bioarchaeological analysis of patterns of health and disease at the Garbacon Creek site (31Cr86), coastal North Carolina.” Poster presented at the American Association of Physical Anthropologists National Meetings, Salt Lake City, UT.

1997 “Patterns of Health and Disease at the Garbacon Creek Site (31Cr86), Carteret County, North Carolina.” Fourth Semester Paper, Ms. on file Research Laboratories of Archaeology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

1993 Cone, C.A. and A.M. Kakaliouras, “Modernity and the Building of Moral Communities: Strategies of Maya Peasants and Middle Class Americans.” Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association National Meetings, Washington, D.C.

Keaveny, B., S.M.T. Myster, A.M. Kakaliouras and B.H. O’Connell, “Intentional Tapping of Human Long Bones from Three Blackduck Sites in Minnesota.” Paper presented at the Midwest Archaeological Conference, Milwaukee, WI.

Kakaliouras, cv - 4 1992 “The Christensen Mound: An Osteo-Archaeological Investigation.” Paper presented at the National Conference of Undergraduate Research, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.

Research and Related Experience: 2012 Resident Fellow, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, Germany (Nov – Dec)

2005 Researcher, The Basel Project (systematic evaluation of skeletal aging methods), Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Naturhistorisches Museum Basel, Switzerland.

2002, 2005 Web author, How Humans Evolved (3rd and 4th ed.): Student Internet Resource Site, W.W. Norton & Co. http://www.wwnorton.com/college/anthro/evolve4/

2000-2001 Research Assistant for McDonnell Grant to study interaction between race and cancer in the 20th century. Department of Social Medicine under the direction of Dr. Keith Wailoo, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill.

1999-2001 Technical Editor and Trainer, Academic Technology Networks, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, http://help.unc.edu/documentation

2000 Web Author and Editor, How Humans Evolved: Student Internet Resource Site, W.W. Norton & Co., http://www.wwnorton.com/college/anthro/evolve2/ancillaries.htm

1996-1998 Program Assistant/Graduate Assistant, American Association of Physical Anthropologists under the direction of Dr. Clark Larsen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

1994-1995 Archaeology Lab Technician, Woodward-Clyde Associates, St. Louis Park, Minnesota.

1993-1995 Research Associate, Sustainable Community Values Project, a Department of Agriculture funded project to undertake ethnographic study of community supported organic farms in the Twin Cities Area, Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota.

1992-1995 Osteology Research Assistant, Hamline University Osteology Laboratory and Minnesota Human Remains Project, St. Paul, Minnesota.

1991 Archaeological Assistant, Minnesota Trunk Highway Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul, Minnesota.

Student Researcher, Hamline University/Leech Lake Heritage Sites Preservation Program Collaborative Archaeological Field School, Cass Lake, Minnesota.

Teaching Experience:

Whittier College (semesters):

Courses taught Fall 2006 – present: Biological Anthropology, Archaeological Anthropology, Theory in Anthropology, Sex & Gender in Anthropology, Environmental Anthropology, History of the Race Concept in Anthropology, Peoples and Cultures of Native America

Kakaliouras, cv - 5 Appalachian State University (semesters): Spring 2006 ANT1230: Biological Anthropology ANT3531: The Past in the Present ANT3532: Bioarchaeology Fall 2005 ANT1230: Biological Anthropology (sections 101 and 102) ANT4310: Human Osteology Spring 2005 ANT1230: Biological Anthropology (sections 101 and 102) ANT3530: Bioarchaeology Fall 2004 ANT1230: Biological Anthropology (sections 101 and 102) Fall 2004 ANT3530: Evolutionary Anthropology Spring 2004 ANT1230: Biological Anthropology (sections 101 and 102) Spring 2004 ANT3530: The Past in the Present Fall 2003 ANT1230: Physical Anthropology (sections 101 and 102) Fall 2003 ANT3530: Evolutionary Anthropology

Student Teaching: Spring 2003 Teaching Assistant and Discussion Section Leader, General Anthropology. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Fall 2002 Course Instructor, The Past in the Present. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Spring 2002 Course Instructor, Social Theory and Anthropological Perspectives on Difference. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Fall 2000 Teaching Assistant and Discussion Section Leader, General Anthropology. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Spring 2000 Course Instructor, Human Evolution and Adaptation. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Fall 1999 Teaching Assistant, General Anthropology. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Spring 1999 Course Instructor, Human Origins. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Spring 1996 Teaching Assistant, Human Origins. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Fall 1994 Teaching Associate, Applied Research in Anthropology. Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota. Fall 1993 Teaching Assistant, Human Evolution. Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota.

Invited talks and commentaries:

Nov. 2012 Invited talks at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, and the University of Bonn Department of the Anthropology of the Americas

April 2011 Invited panel member, Society for American Archaeology tribute to Dr. Jane Buikstra, SAA meetings, Sacramento, CA.

May 6, 2010 Invited Panel Member: “Culturally Unidentifiable Remains and the Politics of NAGPRA Affiliation,” UCLA Archaeology and the Fowler Museum.

January 2008 American University Department of Anthropology, Washington, DC, “Making and Unmaking Anthropology’s Indian: The Case of Aleš Hrdlička.”

January 2007 American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, PA, “The Measures of Our Difference: Anthropometry, Native Americans, and the Construction of Methodology in Physical Anthropology, 1880-1940.”

Kakaliouras, cv - 6 Dec. 2005 Discussant for panel at the American Anthropological Association meetings: “Objects of Knowledge: Scientific Discourse and the Making of Citizens,” organized by Jean Dennison and Lauren Fordyce, University of Florida Department of Anthropology.

Oct. 2005 Appalachian State University Chapter of Sigma Xi, the Scientific Research Society, “Bioarchaeology in North America: The State of the Science.”

March 2005 Appalachian State University Humanities Series, “Rituals Long Deferred: the Native American Reburial Movement and the Humanization of American Anthropology.”

May 20, 2004 Northwestern University Anthropology Department, “Physical anthropological representation of precontact Native Americans in the 20th century: two problematic cases of ‘skin on bones’.”

College Service (Whittier) 2006-2008 Member, Faculty Executive Committee (FEC; Charged to administer all faculty committees) 2006-2008 FEC representative to the Educational Resources Committee (ERC; committee advocated and planned classroom and other teaching technologies) 2009-2011 Chair, Whittier College Human Subjects Protection Committee/Institutional Review Board 2011- Member, Whittier Scholars Council (Faculty body that administers the Whittier Scholars Program) 2013- Faculty representative to the Title IX committee and Title IX Procedural Taskforce

Professional Service and Memberships Manuscript reviewer for the American Anthropologist, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Transforming Anthropology, Current Anthropology, School for Advanced Research, and the University Press of Florida

American Anthropological Association (Biological Anthropology Section, Feminist Anthropology Section, AQA) Executive Board Member, Association for Queer Anthropology American Association of Physical Anthropologists Society for American Archaeology American Society for Ethnohistory Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society Zeta Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa

References available on request.

Kakaliouras, cv - 7