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ANTHROPology Co u rse b o o k s FA L L 2 0 1 6 | S P R I N G 2 0 17 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 1 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology Course Books Table of Contents University of Toronto Press Higher Education Division Anthropology 1 ethnoGRAPHIC 6 Anthropological Theory and Methods 8 Public Anthropology 10 Anthropology of Food 11 Anthropological Insights 12 Teaching Culture 14 Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom 15 The aim at UTP Higher Education is to publish materials for course use that are pedagogically valuable and that contribute to ongoing scholarship. Working as a division within UTP offers exciting opportunities to pursue this goal and to meet the changing needs of teaching and scholarship in North America. The possibilities for rethinking how texts can be used in the classroom, along with new formats for their delivery, are endless, and UTP looks forward to partnering with instructors and scholars in this innovative endeavour! Anthropological Horizons 21 Archaeology 26 Indigenous Studies 28 Index 29 UTP Higher Education acknowledges with thanks the assistance of Livres Canada Books. UTP Higher Education gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund for our publishing activities. Ebooks at UTP Most UTP books are available as ebooks from our website as well as from the vendors listed below. Look for the ebook icon throughout this catalogue and visit utppublishing.com to learn more. For individuals: For institutions: Amazon Kindle Kobo Nook Google Play BryteWave ACLS Humanities E-Book Axis 360 from Baker & Taylor Canadian Electronic Library dawsonera ebrary EBSCOhost JSTOR MyiLibrary Scholar’s Portal PUBLISH WITH UTP The Higher Education Division of UTP is a first alternative to commercial textbook publishers. If you are an instructor who is looking for a refreshing change from the standard course book offerings, consider publishing your next (or your first!) textbook with UTP. We provide creative and editorial licence, personal attention from our editors, quality book production, and proactive sales and marketing at campuses across North America. “My co-author and I have been publishing with UTP Higher Education for several years, and I must say that they have been a joy to work with. I cannot speak highly enough of their editorial staff, the production process, or the quality of their publishing. The marketing of our books has also been superb.” – Liam D. Murphy, California State University, Sacramento UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 2 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology NEW! Anthropology Matters, Third Edition Shirley A. Fedorak Spring 2017 / 7.5 x 9.25 / paper / 252 pp / 978-1-4875-9320-9 US & CDN $42.95 Available as an ebook “This is one of the most intelligent and engaging introductory anthropology texts available. It is pithy and covers all of the critical areas one would expect in an introductory class. The text itself, rich with ethnographic examples, will certainly inspire classroom debates, and discussion questions and classroom activity suggestions are well formulated, encouraging students to get their hands dirty as they wrangle with the issues themselves.” – Liesl L. Gambold, Dalhousie University Anthropology Matters places the study of anthropology concretely in the world by which it is surrounded. It uses a question-based approach to introduce important anthropological concepts, embedding those concepts in contemporary global issues that will interest students. The third edition of this popular text includes two new chapters: one on globalization and transnational mobility, and one on the responsibility of the global community to refugees. The book has also been updated throughout to reflect current events and popular topics, including the impact of social media on political and religious systems, interviews with women who veil, and a discussion of design anthropology. CONTENTS Part One: How Does Anthropology Work? 1. What Are the Challenges in Ethnographic Fieldwork and How Is Ethnographic Research Changing? 2. Of What Use Is Anthropology to the Business World? 3. What Roles Do Anthropologists Play in Language Retention and Revitalization and Are Heritage Languages an Endangered Species? Part Two: Why Does Anthropology Matter? 4. Are Globalization and Transnational Mobility Fueling Modern Day Slavery? 5. What Are the Underlying Reasons for Ethnic Conflict, and the Consequences of These Conflicts? 6. How Does Body Image Affect Self-Esteem, Well-Being, and Identity? 7. Is Female Circumcision a Violation of Human Rights or a Cherished Cultural Tradition? 8. What Are the Socio-Economic, Religious, and Political Implications of Same-Sex Marriage and Changing Family Structure? 9. Is Social Media Changing and Shaping Culture? 10. Does the Global Community Have a Responsibility to Assist Displaced Persons? 11. What Benefits Do NGOs Provide Developing Countries, and How Can Their Presence Generate New Challenges? 12. Is the Practice of Purdah and Veiling Oppressive to Women or an Expression of Their Identity? For more information, visit utppublishing.com UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 1 1 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Through the Lens of Anthropology: An Introduction to Human Evolution and Culture Robert J. Muckle (Capilano University) and Laura Tubelle de González (San Diego Miramar College) 2015 / 8 x 10 / paper / 420 pp / 978-1-4426-0863-4 US & CDN $79.95 Available as an ebook “Many students will take just one elective course in anthropology. For that reason, it is important to use a textbook written for the student, and one they will enjoy reading, not a text written just to appeal to the professor. Through the Lens of Anthropology is the one textbook that achieves this goal. Highly recommended.” – Vaughn M. Bryant, Texas A&M University Through the Lens of Anthropology is a concise but comprehensive introductory textbook that uses the twin themes of food and sustainability to illustrate the connected nature of anthropology’s four major subfields. By viewing the world through the lens of anthropology, students will learn not only about anthropological methods, theories, and ethics, but also the ways in which anthropology is relevant to their everyday lives and embedded in the culture that surrounds them. Beautifully illustrated throughout, with over 150 full-color images, figures, feature boxes, and maps, this is an anthropology text with a fresh perspective, a lively narrative, and plenty of popular topics that are sure to engage students. A strong pedagogical framework structures the book: each chapter features learning objectives, glossary terms, and chapter summaries, as well as review and discussion questions which guide students’ analysis of the topics, themes, and issues raised in the text. This book is interesting to read, manageable to teach, and succeeds at igniting interest in anthropology as a discipline. INSTRUCTOR RESOURCES ONLINE Visit www.lensofanthropology.com for free chapter-by-chapter student resources, including: Hundreds of study questions Downloadable images, maps, figures, and tables Learning objectives Chapter outlines Review questions Discussion questions Glossary Further reading Web links 2 Anthropology Instructor’s manual, including the following: - Learning objectives - Chapter outlines and key points - Lecture suggestions - Assignments and activities - Answers to review questions - Lists of key terms - Key resources and suggested readings - Web links Downloadable images, maps, figures, and tables PowerPoint slides Testbank Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 2 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology CONTENTS 1. Introduction: Viewing the World through the Lens of Anthropology Defining Anthropology, Defining Human, and Defining Culture The Four Fields and Applied Anthropology The Anthropological Perspective History of Anthropology, Mostly in North America Situating Anthropology The Importance of Anthropology in an Increasingly Connected World 2. We Are Primates: The Primate Background Primate Taxonomy Primate Evolution Primate Behavior Primates in Crisis: Ecological Stability and Critical Thinking 3. Evolutionary Thought and Theory The Nature of Science History of Evolutionary Thought and Theory Modern Evolutionary Theory 4. Human Biological Evolution Palaeoanthropology—Methods, Concepts, and Issues Defining Hominins Becoming Bipedal The First Hominins The Genus Homo Summary of Trends in Human Biological Evolution The Concept of Race 5. Human Cultural Evolution from 2.5 Million to 20,000 Years Ago The Archaeological Record The Problems of Archaeological Visibility and Bias Overview of Cultural Evolution to 20,000 Years Ago Expanding Territories 6. Cultural Evolution from 20,000 to 5,000 Years Ago Principal Cultural Periods Archaeology of North America from 20,000 to 5,000 Years Ago The Transition to Food Production Settlement and Technology Changes in Social and Political Systems Civilizations, Writing, and Art 7. Archaeology of the Last 5,000 Years Ancient Civilizations Population Estimates, Continued Colonization, and Maintaining Diversity The Last 5,000 Years in North America Archaeology of Recent Times, Excluding Civilizations World Heritage Archaeology of the Contemporary World Pseudoarchaeology 8. Studying Culture The Culture Concept Ethnocentrism and Cultural Relativism Cultural Adaptation and Maladaptation The Functions of Culture Personality Development Fieldwork Methods and Ethics Digital Ethnography Applied Anthropology 9. Language and Culture Language and Communication: Signs and Symbols Language Origins Studying Language through the Lens of Anthropology Nonverbal Communication Ethnolinguistics Language in the Digital Age Language Change and Loss 1 0. Food-Getting and Economics Adaptive Strategies: Food Foragers and Food Producers Food Foragers Economic Resources: Who Gets What and How? Food Producers The Human Diet 1 1. Marriage, Family, and Gender Marriage Spouses: How Many and Who Is Eligible? Family Residence Patterns Marriage as Economic Exchange Kinship Descent Patterns Gender Roles: Patterned by Culture 1 2. Politics: Keeping Order Use of Power Social Controls and Conflict Resolution Types of Political Organization Social Inequality Ethnic Politics Violence and War 13. Supernaturalism Studying Belief Systems Sacred Roles Religious Practitioners Religious Resistance Supernatural Beliefs and Cultural Expression 1 4. Anthropology and Sustainability History of Human-Environmental Issues Defining Sustainability Anthropological Approaches to Sustainability Studies Issues in Sustainability Studies How Can Anthropologists Help? For more information, visit utppublishing.com UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 3 3 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology Stories of Culture and Place: An Introduction to Anthropology Michael G. Kenny and Kirsten Smillie (both at Simon Fraser University) 2014 / 7.5 x 9.25 / paper / 288 pp / 978-1-4426-0794-1 US & CDN $44.95 Available as an ebook “This is the best new textbook I have seen in a long time. It avoids some of the major bugaboos that are de rigueur in most other textbooks, while using fresh examples, many anchored in the North American experience.” – Les Field, University of New Mexico “I don’t like textbooks, especially anthropology textbooks. Too often they drain the life out of the discipline. This book is different. Fully and deeply historical, the text unravels the central stories from anthropology to show the past in the present, all the while illustrating anthropology’s contemporary relevance.” – Jan Newberry, University of Lethbridge This original introduction to cultural anthropology is a textbook like no other. Structured as a narrative rather than a compendium of facts about cultures and concepts, it invites students to think of anthropology as a series of stories that emerge from cultural encounters in particular times and places. These moments of encounter are illustrated with reference to both classic and contemporary ethnographic examples—from Coming of Age in Samoa to Coming of Age in Second Life—allowing students to grasp anthropology’s sometimes problematic past, while still capturing the excitement and potential of the discipline. CONTENTS Introduction: First Contact Part One: Theory, Methods, Concepts 1. Culture Shock 2.Life in the Field Part Two: Classic Questions in Anthropology 3. Historical Beginnings 4.Kinship 5. Symbol, Myth, and Meaning Part Three: Contemporary Anthropological Issues 6. The Politics of Culture 7. Understanding Gender 8. Race, Science, and Human Diversity 9. Anthropology, Cultural Change, and Globalization Conclusion 4 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 4 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology Afghanistan Remembers: Gendered Narrations of Violence and Culinary Practices Parin Dossa (Simon Fraser University) 2014 / 6 x 9 / paper / 192 pp / 978-1-4426-1537-3 US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook In Afghanistan Remembers, Parin Dossa examines Afghan women’s recall of violence through memories and food practices in their homeland and its diaspora. Her work reveals how the suffering and trauma of violence has been rendered socially invisible following decades of life in a war-zone. Informed by Dossa’s own story of family migration and loss, Afghanistan Remembers is a poignant ethnographic account of the trauma of war. Trickster: An Anthropological Memoir Eileen Kane 2010 / 6 x 9 / paper / 256 pp / 978-1-4426-0178-9 US & CDN $28.95 Available as an ebook A young anthropologist leaves her violent Mafia-run hometown— Youngstown, Ohio—to study an “exotic” group, the Paiute Indians of Nevada. This is 1964; she’ll be “the expert” and they’ll be “the subjects.” The Paiute elders have other ideas. Why do the Paiutes love Coyote? Why do Youngstown mill workers vote for Mafia candidates for municipal office? In this beautifully written memoir, tricksters become key to understanding how oppressed groups function in a hostile world. Pop Culture: The Culture of Everyday Life Shirley A. Fedorak 2009 / 6 x 9 / paper / 176 pp / 978-1-4426-0124-6 US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook This book begins by defining popular culture, outlining criticisms, and examining the impact of globalization on pop culture. It then explores mass media and popular culture (soap operas, Egyptian melodramas, Afro-Cuban rap music, and virtual communities), artistic expression and popular culture (graffiti art and body art), and gatherings and popular culture (fast food in Japan, equality in sport, and wedding rituals). For more information, visit utppublishing.com UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 5 5 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology ethnoGraphic University of Toronto Press is excited to announce a groundbreaking new series that realizes ethnographic research in graphic novel form. Designed as both pedagogical tools and innovative modes of scholarly communication, books in the series will embrace the unique combination of image and text as a way to translate ethnography for a broader audience. FIRST IN THE SERIES! Lissa: An Ethnographic Story about Medical Promise, Friendship, and Revolution Sherine Hamdy (Brown University) and Coleman Nye (Simon Fraser University) Illustrated by Sarula Bao and Carolyn Brewer (both at Rhode Island School of Design) Forthcoming in 2017 / 6 x 9 / paper / 152 pp / 978-1-4875-9347-6 US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook Anna is the daughter of an American couple working in Cairo. Layla is the daughter of the doorman in Anna’s apartment building. Together they strike up an unlikely friendship that is put to the test when both girls are faced with family health crises at home and revolutionary unrest on the streets. As Anna and Layla reckon with illness, risk, and loss in different ways, they learn the power of friendship and the importance of hope. Ultimately, they must recognize that there is still time to fight for a better tomorrow, together. KEY FEATURES T he first book in the ethnoGRAPHIC series, and the first to be conceived of and developed for use in the undergraduate anthropology classroom A fictional story based on medical anthropological research on kidney disease in Egypt and breast cancer in North America Introduction by acclaimed comic artist Paul Karasik on “How to Read Comics” Afterword by George Marcus on “Comics and Ethnography” Ideal for courses in cultural anthropology, medical anthropology, Middle Eastern studies, gender, ethnographic writing, and visual anthropology Can be used at both introductory level and in more specialized upper year courses Includes a teaching/reading guide with discussion questions, suggested classroom activities, and a glossary of key Arabic and medical terms Includes a timeline of the Egyptian Revolution Will be accompanied by an open-access website, featuring an extended “making of” documentary, medical and political background information, and important concepts and themes 6 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 6 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology NEW! Drawn to See: Drawing as an Ethnographic Method Andrew Causey (Columbia College Chicago) Fall 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 192 pp / 978-1-4426-3665-1 US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook In a world that increasingly requires researchers to skim, scan, glance, and browse, we might wonder how well we actually see. In this combined how-to-see / how-to-draw manual, Andrew Causey offers insights, inspiration, practical techniques, and encouragement for social scientists interested in exploring drawing as an alternative method of translating what they “see” during their research. Designed for those with no drawing experience, it includes a set of carefully calibrated exercises, grounded in ethnography, to provide comfort and confidence with drawing, as well as an understanding of the unique possibilities that drawing might offer contemporary research methods. NEW! A Different Kind of Ethnography: Imaginative Practices and Creative Methodologies Edited by Denielle Elliott (York University) and Dara Culhane (Simon Fraser University) Fall 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 144 pp / 978-1-4426-3661-3 US & CDN $27.95 Available as an ebook This innovative book introduces the latest in scholarship and experimental methods in what has come to be known as “sensory ethnography.” Conceptualizing ethnography as a critical process of inquiry that is at once empirical and theoretical, the authors organize their thoughts around five key methodologies: sensing, walking, writing, performing, and recording. They also integrate more traditional methods like participant observation, interviewing, and documentary research. Each chapter includes practical exercises, a list of further resources, and links to online materials that can help encourage a more imaginative and creative methodology. For more information, visit utppublishing.com UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 7 7 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Theory and Methods NEW! A History of Anthropological Theory, Fifth Edition Paul A. Erickson (St. Mary’s University) and Liam D. Murphy (California State University, Sacramento) Fall 2016 / 8 x 10 / paper / 320 pp / 978-1-4426-3683-5 US & CDN $44.95 Available as an ebook “Erickson and Murphy have done something very important. They have shown that a discipline dominated by fragmenting tendencies has a coherent historical core that helps make sense of the fragmentation. Highly recommended.” – Robert Borofsky, Hawaii Pacific University This bestselling overview of the history of anthropological theory spans from antiquity to the twenty-first century, offering an accessible and engaging four-field introduction to the discipline of anthropology. The fifth edition has been revised throughout, with stronger coverage of feminism, gender, and sexuality in anthropology, as well as an entirely new section on the anthropology of new media and technology. Additional biographical information about some of theorists has been added along with keyword definitions in the margins. Read on its own, or paired with the popular companion volume, Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory, this book provides a solid foundation for students of anthropological theory. KEY FEATURES New sections on feminism and anthropology, gendered culture, and anthropology and sexualities New section on anthropologies of the digital age Pedagogical apparatus updated with discussion questions, biographical information about theorists, margin definitions of keywords, glossary, and suggested reading Published simultaneously with the new edition of Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory to offer a comprehensive but flexible set of tools to teach anthropological theory ONLINE Visit the “Teaching Theory” page at www.utpteachingculture.com for extra resources, including: Glossary of theory terms Free downloadable essays by anthropologists on the topic of “Why Theory Matters” Sample syllabi Web links SPECIAL COMBINED PRICE A History of Anthropological Theory may be ordered together with Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory at a special discounted price. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 8 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 8 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Theory and Methods NEW! Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory, Fifth Edition Edited by Paul A. Erickson (St. Mary’s University) and Liam D. Murphy (California State University, Sacramento) Fall 2016 / 8 x 10 / paper / 656 pp / 978-1-4426-3687-3 US & CDN $74.95 Available as an ebook “Erickson and Murphy’s Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory provides an outstanding introduction to key analysts and themes. The overview sections, chapter introductions, identification of key words, and study questions will help students contextualize the material. Both instructors and students will find this a useful and valuable collection.” – A.H. Peter Castro, Syracuse University This comprehensive anthology offers over forty readings that are critical to an understanding of anthropological theory and the development of anthropology as an academic discipline. The fifth edition maintains a strong grounding in both classical and contemporary anthropological theory with a sharpened focus on gender and anthropology and the anthropology of new media and technology. Short introductions and key terms accompany every reading, and light annotations have been added throughout. Read on its own, or paired with A History of Anthropological Theory, this anthology offers an unrivaled introduction to anthropological theory that reflects not only the history, but also the changing nature of the discipline today. KEY FEATURES New sections on feminism and anthropology, gendered culture, and anthropology and sexualities New section on anthropologies of the digital age Light annotations in the margins now accompany each reading, offering some aid to students who have difficulty reading primary texts but without doing all the work for them Pedagogical apparatus completely revised and rewritten to include a general introduction as well as short introductions to each reading, key terms, discussion questions, and suggestions for further reading Published simultaneously with the new edition of A History of Anthropological Theory to offer a comprehensive but flexible set of tools to teach anthropological theory ALSO AVAILABLE Anthropology: A Student’s Guide to Theory and Method, Second Edition Auto-Ethnographies: The Anthropology of Academic Practices Stanley R. Barrett (University of Guelph) Edited by Anne Meneley (Trent University) and Donna J. Young (University of Toronto) 2009 / 6 x 9 / paper / 280 pp / 978-0-8020-9612-8 / US & CDN $32.95 Available as an ebook 2005 / 6 x 9 / paper / 255 pp / 978-1-5511-1684-6 / US & CDN $29.95 For more information, visit utppublishing.com UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 9 9 16-08-09 4:59 PM Public Anthropology RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Public Anthropology: Engaging Social Issues in the Modern World Edward J. Hedican (University of Guelph) 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 256 pp / 978-1-4426-3588-3 US & CDN $44.95 Available as an ebook “A thoughtful overview of questions central to public anthropology, with examples and case studies that will prove illuminating and helpful to undergraduates. A valuable addition to any course on public anthropology.” – Robert Borofsky, Director, Center for a Public Anthropology Contemporary anthropology has changed drastically in the new millennium, expanding beyond the anachronistic study of “primitive” societies to confront the burning social, economic, and political challenges of the day. In the process, anthropologists often come face to face with issues that require them to take a public position—issues such as race and tolerance, health and well-being, food security, reconciliation and public justice, global terror and militarism, and digital media. This comprehensive but accessible book is both an interesting read and an excellent overview of public anthropology. In-depth case studies offer an opportunity to evaluate the pros and cons of engaging with public issues, while profiles of select anthropologists ensure the book is contemporary, but rooted in the history of the discipline. CONTENTS 1. Introduction: Engaging Social Issues 2. What is Public Anthropology? 3. Race, Science, and the Public Forum 4. Jared Diamond: Social Darwinism Revisited 5. Health, Well-Being, and Food Security 6. Forensic Anthropology 7. Resistance, Reconciliation, and Public Justice 8.Global Terror, Militarism, and Counterinsurgency 9. Media, the Internet, and Our Global Village 10. Trends and Prospects KEY FEATURES Examines three main questions: What activities are modern anthropologists involved in? What are the modern issues that concern the anthropological community? How involved should anthropologists be in these public and controversial issues? Profiles notable anthropologists such as Bronislaw Malinowski, Richard Salisbury, Franz Boas, Margaret Mead, Diamond Jenness, and Max Gluckman Includes over 20 black-and-white photos 10 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 10 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropology of Food Eating Culture: An Anthropological Guide to Food Gillian Crowther (Capilano University) 2013 / 7.5 x 9.25 / paper / 352 pp / 978-1-4426-0465-0 US & CDN $39.95 Available as an ebook “At last, a text for teaching the anthropology of food. From hunting and gathering to the global supply chain, this book offers an engaging entrée into thinking about food from a variety of cultural perspectives while introducing key concepts in cultural anthropology.” – Rachel E. Black, Boston University Organized around the sometimes elusive concept of cuisine and the public discourse that surrounds it, this practical guide to anthropological method and theory brings order and insight to our changing relationship with food. CONTENTS Introduction: Setting the Anthropological Table 1. Omnivorousness: Defining Food Omnivorousness The Omnivore’s Dilemma Food Classifications and Rules Humoral Classifications Nutritional Classifications State-Based Nutritional Food Rules 2. Settled Ingredients: Domestic Food Production Food-Getting Strategies and Cuisines Hunter-Gathering or Foraging Domestication of Plants and Animals Pastoralism Horticulture Agriculture Exchanging Ingredients and Flavours 3. Mobile Ingredients: Global Food Production Further Agricultural Intensification Exporting Industrial Agriculture Commercializing Food: Industrial and National Cuisines 4. Cooks and Kitchens The Origins of Fire Use and Cooking Cooking Techniques Cooking and Food-Getting Strategies Thinking through Cooking: The Culinary Triangle Cooking and Gender Men’s Conspicuous Cooking: Public Cuisine Domestic Kitchens: Home-Cooked Cuisine 5. Recipes and Dishes Recipes: Creating Dishes Experiential Cooking: Domestic Recipes Textual Cooking: Commercial Recipes Cookbooks: Codifying National Cuisines British Cuisine: Cookbooks and Dishes Cookbooks: Travelling Recipes and Dishes 6. Eating-In: Commensality and Gastro-politics Patterns of Eating When: Mealtimes What: Dishes and Proper Meals How: Commensality Where: Private and Public Who: Kin to Strangers Gastro-politics Special Meals: Feasting 7. Eating-Out and Gastronomy Eating Away from Home: A Risky Business? Street Food: Eating Standing Up Public Eating: Sitting Down Characteristics of Restaurants Gastronomy: Cultivating Culinary Taste Types of Restaurants: Culinary Foodscapes Indian Cuisine in Britain Chinese Cuisine in North America Restaurants as “Ethnosites”: Cross-Cultural Encounters 8.Gastro-anomie: Global Indigestion? Globalized Industrial Food: Gastro-anomie Indigenous Gastro-anomie Digesting the Discourse Angry Farmers: Food Sovereignty Food Crises: Food Security Food Insecurity: Health, Gastro-anomie, and Cuisines 9.Local Digestion: Making the Global at Home Localizing Global Foods: From Sushi to Hamburgers Globalized Commodities Locavorism: Eating Locally Farmers’ Markets: Local Foods and Faces Ethical Consumers: Local and Global Implications Epilogue: Leftovers to Takeaway For more information, visit utppublishing.com 11 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 11 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Insights Anthropological Insights The Anthropological Insights Series features very brief and competitively priced books that are designed to fill the gap between contemporary research published in journals and the information found in most textbooks. The series aims to capture the excitement of anthropological research by offering ethnographically grounded examples, while making connections with the history of the discipline and its potential future manifestations. FIRST IN THE SERIES! Global Inequality: Anthropological Insights Kenneth McGill (Southern Connecticut State University) 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 136 pp / 978-1-4426-3451-0 US & CDN $19.95 Available as an ebook “Providing ethnographic depth and bringing together wide-ranging anthropological perspectives in an area often dominated by economics and political science, McGill shows how inequalities are produced, sustained, challenged, and conceptualized by people worldwide.” – Sean T. Mitchell, Rutgers University Inequality is currently gaining considerable attention in academic, policy, and media circles. From Thomas Piketty to Robert Putnam, there is no shortage of economic, sociological, or political analyses. But what does anthropology, with its focus on the qualitative character of relationships between people, have to offer? Drawing on current scholarship and illustrative ethnographic case studies, McGill argues that anthropology is particularly well suited to interrogating global inequality, not just within nations, but across nations as well. Brief, accessibly written, and peppered with vivid ethnographic examples that bring contemporary research to life, Global Inequality is an introduction to the topic from a unique and important perspective. CONTENTS 1. Introduction: Anthropology and Global Inequality 2. Global Inequality: Historical-Anthropological Perspectives 3. The Challenge of Global Inequality 4. The Production of Inequality 5. Rights, Equality, and the Nation-State 12 Anthropology 6. Welfare and Economic Inequality 7. Resistance and Social Organization in an Unequal World 8. Situated Subjects in an Unequal World Appendix 1: Additional Readings and Films Appendix 2: Study and Essay Questions Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 12 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Insights NEW! Mental Disorder: Anthropological Insights Nichola Khan (University of Brighton) Fall 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 144 pp / 978-1-4426-3533-3 US & CDN $19.95 Available as an ebook This brief book introduces the ways in which contemporary anthropology engages with the “psych” disciplines: psychology, psychiatry, and medicine. New approaches to mental illness are situated in the context of historical, political, psychoanalytic, and postcolonial frameworks, encouraging students to understand how health, illness, normality, and abnormality are constructed and produced. Using case studies from a variety of regions, Khan explores what anthropologically-informed psychology, psychiatry, and medicine can tell us about mental illness across cultures. Innovative discussion questions and activities, as well as further reading and web links, make the book an ideal teaching tool in a variety of courses. NEW! Posthumanism: Anthropological Insights Alan Smart and Josephine Smart (both at University of Calgary) Spring 2017 / 6 x 9 / paper / 128 pp / 978-1-4426-3641-5 US & CDN $19.95 Available as an ebook Designed to bring the excitement of posthumanist discussions to the undergraduate classroom, this brief and accessible book makes an original argument about anthropology’s legacy as a study of “more than human.” Smart and Smart return to the holism of classic ethnographies where cattle, pigs, yams, and sorcerers were central to the lives that were narrated by anthropologists, but they extend the discussion to include contemporary issues like microbiomes, the Anthropocene, and nano-machines, which take holism beyond locally bounded spaces. They outline what a holism without boundaries could look like, and what anthropology could offer to the knowledge of more-than-human nature in the past, present, and future. For more information, visit utppublishing.com 13 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 13 16-08-09 4:59 PM Teaching Culture The Teaching Culture Blog Join an active, growing community of anthropologists who are interested in sharing strategies, news, and innovations in both teaching and publishing. www.utpteachingculture.com If you share an interest for teaching and publishing in anthropology, we invite you to do the following: 1. Follow us on Twitter @TeachingCulture. 2. Contribute a guest blog posting on any topic related to teaching anthropology. 3. Share any helpful resources you may have for teaching (e.g. syllabi, exercises, useful links to online resources, etc.). The site also incorporates a wealth of resources for instructors teaching anthropological theory, including a massive glossary of theory terms, free downloadable essays by anthropologists on the topic of “Why Theory Matters,” sample syllabi, and useful links that help bring a multimedia dimension to theory. Visit the “Teaching Theory” page at www.utpteachingculture.com to access these resources. The Teaching Culture Series Series Editor: John Barker, University of British Columbia Increasingly, instructors of anthropology are looking for ethnographic content that engages students. At the same time, many anthropologists want and need to reach broader publics. Where these two needs meet, there is fertile ground for experimentation and creativity. Enter Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom, a series of ethnographies that are designed specifically to meet the challenges of teaching today’s students. We welcome proposals from those who want to: 1. Write ethnographies that resonate with students and a broader audience. 2. Meet the challenges of teaching. 3. Flex their creative muscles to find new ways to translate their rich material into readable ethnographies. Explore the many titles in the Teaching Culture Series in the next few pages of this catalogue! 14 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 14 16-08-09 4:59 PM Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Ancestral Lines: The Maisin of Papua New Guinea and the Fate of the Rainforest, Second Edition John Barker (University of British Columbia) 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 248 pp / 978-1-4426-3592-0 US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook Beautifully written and accessible, Ancestral Lines is designed with introductory cultural anthropology courses in mind. Barker has organized the book into chapters that mirror many of the major topics covered in introductory courses, such as kinship, economic pursuit, social arrangements, gender relations, religion, politics, and the environment. The second edition has been revised throughout, with a new timeline of events and a final chapter that brings readers up to date on important events since 2002, including a devastating cyclone and a major court victory against the forestry industry. RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Merchants in the City of Art: Work, Identity, and Change in a Florentine Neighborhood Anne Schiller (George Mason University) 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 176 pp / 978-1-4426-3461-9 US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook San Lorenzo, a neighborhood in the historic centre of Florence, and home to a market that has existed since before the Renaissance, is undergoing rapid change, and even decline, as Italy deals with immigration and globalization pressures. This lively and engaging ethnography, written and designed with students in mind, uses the experiences and perspectives of a set of long-time market vendors to explore how cultural identities are formed in periods of profound social and economic change. COMING SOON IN THE TEACHING CULTURE SERIES Deeply Rooted in the Present: Heritage, Memory, and Identity in Brazilian Quilombos Mary Lorena Kenny (Eastern Connecticut State University) Spring 2017 / 6 x 9 / paper / 128 pp / 978-1-4426-3474-9 / US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook Long Night at the Vepsian Museum: The Forest Folk of Northern Russia and the Struggle for Cultural Survival Veronica Davidov (Monmouth University) Spring 2017 / 6 x 9 / paper / 160 pp / 978-1-4426-3618-7 / US & CDN $26.95 Available as an ebook For more information, visit utppublishing.com 15 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 15 16-08-09 4:59 PM Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom Love Stories: Language, Private Love, and Public Romance in Georgia Paul Manning (Trent University) 2015 / 6 x 9 / paper / 192 pp / 978-1-4426-0896-2 US & CDN $27.95 Available as an ebook In this fascinating book, Manning recreates the story of how the private, secretive practices of the Khevsurs in the remote highlands of the country of Georgia became a matter of national interest, concern, and fantasy. Looking at personal expressions of love and the circulation of these narratives at the broader public level, Love Stories offers an ethnography of language and desire that doubles as an introduction to linguistic anthropology. Culturing Bioscience: A Case Study in the Anthropology of Science Udo Krautwurst (University of Prince Edward Island) 2014 / 6 x 9 / paper / 224 pp / 978-1-4426-0462-9 US & CDN $28.95 Available as an ebook Culturing Bioscience is an accessible case study that looks at the role bioscience plays in both the academy and broader society. The book focuses on the scientific community at a biomedical facility situated on a North American university campus, offering a fascinating glimpse into scientific culture and the social and political context in which that culture operates. Made in Madagascar: Sapphires, Ecotourism, and the Global Bazaar Andrew Walsh (Western University) 2012 / 6 x 9 / paper / 128 pp / 978-1-4426-0374-5 US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook This beautifully written and extremely popular ethnography invites students into the worlds of Madagascar and participant observation, gradually building their knowledge and confidence in the subject matter while simultaneously challenging and deepening their critical thinking skills. An online version of the introduction can be accessed at www.madeinmadagascar.wordpress.com. 16 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 16 16-08-09 4:59 PM Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom Fields of Play: An Ethnography of Children’s Sports Noel Dyck (Simon Fraser University) 2012 / 6 x 9 / paper / 224 pp / 978-1-4426-0079-9 / US & CDN $27.95 Available as an ebook Bridging anthropology, sport studies, and childhood studies, Fields of Play offers a rich understanding of an area that has, to date, gained relatively little attention by social scientists: the dynamics of community sports activities. Red Flags and Lace Coiffes: Identity and Survival in a Breton Village Charles R. Menzies (University of British Columbia) 2011 / 6 x 9 / paper / 160 pp / 978-1-4426-0512-1 / US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook Touching on many concepts that are fundamental to anthropology—culture, identity, kinship, work, political economy, and globalization—and filled with personal stories and warmth, this ethnography will be a welcome teaching tool for instructors. Rites of the Republic: Citizens’ Theatre and the Politics of Culture in Southern France Mark Ingram (Goucher College) 2011 / 6 x 9 / paper / 240 pp / 978-1-4426-0176-5 / US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook This fascinating exploration of citizenship and the politics of culture in contemporary France follows two theatre troupes in Provence, focusing on their personal stories and the continuities between their narratives, their performances, and the national discourse on culture. Maya or Mestizo? Nationalism, Modernity, and its Discontents Ronald Loewe (California State University, Long Beach) 2010 / 6 x 9 / paper / 224 pp / 978-1-4426-0142-0 / US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook Loewe offers a contemporary look at a Maya community caught between tradition and modernity. He weaves the history of Mexico and this particular community into the analysis, offering a unique understanding of how one local community has faced the onslaught of modernization. For more information, visit utppublishing.com 17 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 17 16-08-09 4:59 PM Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom White Lies about the Inuit John L. Steckley (Humber College) 2008 / 6 x 9 / paper / 176 pp / 978-1-5511-1875-8 / US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook This lively book unpacks three of the “white lies” about the Inuit: the myth that there are fifty-two words for snow, the belief that there are blond, blue-eyed Inuit descended from the Vikings, and the notion that the Inuit send their elders to die on ice floes. Hidden Heads of Households: Child Labor in Urban Northeast Brazil Mary Lorena Kenny (Eastern Connecticut State University) 2007 / 6 x 9 / paper / 144 pp / 978-1-4426-0084-3 / US & CDN $25.95 Available as an ebook In this fascinating study, based on close to 15 years of research and interviews in the urban areas of Northeast Brazil, Kenny addresses the questions of why children migrate to the city, how they negotiate their existence, and why they stay. Contested Representations: Revisiting Into the Heart of Africa Shelley Ruth Butler (McGill University) 2007 / 6 x 9 / paper / 168 pp / 978-1-5511-1777-5 / US & CDN $27.95 Available as an ebook Contested Representations is a compelling examination of the controversy surrounding the “Into the Heart of Africa” exhibition at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto in the early 1990s; it discusses race, postmodernism, colonialism, activism, and museum practices. Back Door Java: State Formation and the Domestic in Working Class Java Jan Newberry (University of Lethbridge) 2006 / 6 x 9 / paper / 208 pp / 978-1-5511-1689-1 / US & CDN $28.95 Available as an ebook Back Door Java explores the everyday lives of ordinary urban Javanese, using rich ethnographic description of a neighbourhood in Central Java to illuminate the ways in which state rule is intimately connected to the household and the community. 18 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 18 16-08-09 4:59 PM Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom Waiting for Macedonia: Identity in a Changing World Ilka Thiessen (Vancouver Island University) 2006 / 6 x 9 / paper / 208 pp / 978-1-5511-1719-5 / US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook In this ethnography, Thiessen explores the different ways in which identity has been negotiated in Macedonia since the disintegration of Yugoslavia, investigating the everyday habits of a group of young professional women. The Person in Dementia: A Study of Nursing Home Care in the US Athena McLean (Central Michigan University) 2006 / 6 x 9 / paper / 320 pp / 978-1-5511-1606-8 / US & CDN $32.95 Available as an ebook Based on years of ethnographic study in a US nursing home, The Person in Dementia offers a fine-tuned analysis of how relations among direct care-giving, professional, and administrative staff within a facility can dramatically affect the quality of dementia care. StreetCities: Rehousing the Homeless Rae Bridgman (University of Manitoba) 2006 / 6 x 9 / paper / 224 pp / 978-1-5511-1533-7 / US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook StreetCities charts the development of an alternative communal housing model for chronically homeless men and women in downtown Toronto and explores how living on the street has the potential to become a powerful emblem of community growth, tolerance, and caring. Svinia in Black and White: Slovak Roma and their Neighbours David Z. Scheffel (Thompson Rivers University) 2005 / 6 x 9 / paper / 256 pp / 978-1-5511-1607-5 / US & CDN $28.95 Available as an ebook This book offers a detailed ethnographic account of the social, cultural, and historical circumstances that have contributed to inter-ethnic inequality in Slovakia. It demonstrates the complexity of what is often referred to as Europe’s “Gypsy problem” with passion and sensitivity. For more information, visit utppublishing.com 19 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 19 16-08-09 4:59 PM Teaching Culture: UTP Ethnographies for the Classroom Inequality, Poverty, and Neoliberal Governance: Activist Ethnography in the Homeless Sheltering Industry Vincent Lyon-Callo (Western Michigan University) 2004 / 6 x 9 / paper / 192 pp / 978-1-4426-0086-7 / US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook Drawing upon years of ethnographic fieldwork in a homeless shelter in Massachusetts, the author argues that homelessness must be understood within the context of increasing neoliberal policies, practices, and discourses. Between History and Tomorrow: Making and Breaking Everyday Life in Rural Newfoundland Gerald Sider (CUNY, Staten Island) 2003 / 6 x 9 / paper / 344 pp / 978-1-5511-1517-7 / US & CDN $29.95 This classic ethnography focuses on the spaces that have developed between those who are and those who are not “making it” since the demise of the cod fishery in Newfoundland, and the struggles of people to survive and to succeed. Over the Next Hill: An Ethnography of RVing Seniors in North America, Second Edition Dorothy Ayers Counts and David R. Counts 2001 / 6 x 9 / paper / 352 pp / 978-1-5511-1423-1 / US & CDN $28.95 Available as an ebook In this book, anthropologists Dorothy and David Counts tell the story of their research living the life of RVing seniors in trailer parks, “boondocking” sites on government land, laundromats, and other meeting places across the continent. Life Among the Yanomami John F. Peters (Wilfrid Laurier University) 1998 / 6 x 9 / paper / 304 pp / 978-1-5511-1193-3 / US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook Life Among the Yanomami provides a rich and well-rounded understanding of this famously isolated people. Key issues explored by the author include family and village life, health and health care, demography, politicization, and cultural survival. 20 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 20 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Horizons Anthropological Horizons This series focuses on theoretically informed ethnographic works addressing issues of mind and body, knowledge and power, equality and inequality, the individual and the collective. Ideal for use in upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses and interdisciplinary in their perspective, the books make a unique contribution in a wide range of academic disciplines. Series Editor: Michael Lambek, University of Toronto NEW! Tournaments of Value: Sociability and Hierarchy in a Yemeni Town, 20th Anniversary Edition Anne Meneley (Trent University) Fall 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 264 pp / 978-1-4875-2132-5 / US & CDN $32.95 Available as an ebook This classic ethnography of the varied experience of women in the Islamic Middle East describes the remarkable velocity, energy, and elaborateness of the world of female socializing. Highly readable and accessible, it incorporates vignettes to illustrate more analytical points and to enliven the text. This expanded anniversary edition introduces a new generation of students to this seminal work on Middle Eastern ethnography. RECENTLY PUBLISHED! The Heart of Helambu: Ethnography and Entanglement in Nepal Tom O’Neill (Brock University) 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 184 pp / 978-1-4875-2023-6 / US & CDN $22.95 Available as an ebook The Heart of Helambu provides a compelling account of ethnographic fieldwork’s personal dimension and the ethical and emotional challenges that come with maintaining relationships across substantial social distances. In this evocative and touching autoethnographic memoir, the author reflects on the complex relationships he developed with his research participants in Nepal over the course of twenty-five years. RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Why the Porcupine Is Not a Bird: Explorations in the Folk Zoology of an Eastern Indonesian People Gregory Forth (University of Alberta) 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 400 pp / 978-1-4875-2001-4 / US & CDN $36.95 Available as an ebook Why the Porcupine Is Not a Bird is a comprehensive analysis of the knowledge of animals among the Nage people of central Flores in Indonesia. Gregory Forth sheds light on the ongoing anthropological debate surrounding the categorization of animals in small-scale, non-Western societies. For more information, visit utppublishing.com 21 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 21 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Horizons RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Legacies of Violence: History, Society, and the State in Sardinia Antonio Sorge (York University) 2015 / 6 x 9 / paper / 232 pp / 978-1-4426-2729-1 / US & CDN $26.95 Available as an ebook Legacies of Violence examines the effects that a history of violence exercises on collective representations, demonstrating how social memory continues to shape the present in the Sardinian highlands. RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Milanese Encounters: Public Space and Vision in Contemporary Urban Italy Cristina Moretti (Simon Fraser University) 2015 / 6 x 9 / paper / 304 pp / 978-1-4426-2699-7 / US & CDN $32.95 Available as an ebook Milanese Encounters reveals how the meanings of Milan’s public spaces shift as the city’s various inhabitants use, appropriate, and travel through locations such as community centres, abandoned industrial areas, and central plazas and streets. RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Looking Back, Moving Forward: Transformation and Ethical Practice in the Ghanaian Church of Pentecost Girish Daswani (University of Toronto) 2015 / 6 x 9 / paper / 280 pp / 978-1-4426-2658-4 / US & CDN $27.95 Available as an ebook Bringing together the anthropology of Christianity and the anthropology of ethics, Looking Back, Moving Forward investigates the compromises with the past that members of Ghana’s Church of Pentecost make in order to remain committed Christians. RECENTLY PUBLISHED! The Land of Weddings and Rain: Nation and Modernity in Post-Socialist Lithuania Gediminas Lankauskas (University of Regina) 2015 / 6 x 9 / paper / 352 pp / 978-1-4426-1256-3 / US & CDN $36.95 Available as an ebook This ethnography examines the components of the contemporary urban wedding—religious and civil ceremonies, “traditional” imagery and practices, and the conspicuous consumption of domestic and imported goods—in the context of the Western-style modernization of post-socialist Lithuania. 22 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 22 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Horizons In Light of Africa: Globalizing Blackness in Northeast Brazil Allan Charles Dawson (Drew University) 2014 / 6 x 9 / paper / 208 pp / 978-1-4426-2669-0 / US & CDN $27.95 Available as an ebook In Light of Africa explores how the idea of Africa as a real place, an imagined homeland, and a metaphor for Black identity is used in the cultural politics of the Brazilian state of Bahia. Remembering Nayeche and the Gray Bull Engiro: African Storytellers of the Karamoja Plateau and the Plains of Turkana Mustafa Kemal Mirzeler (Western Michigan University) 2014 / 6 x 9 / paper / 392 pp / 978-1-4426-2631-7 / US & CDN $34.95 Available as an ebook Since the 1990s, Mirzeler has travelled to East Africa to apprentice with storytellers. This book is both an account of his experience listening to these storytellers and of how oral tradition continues to evolve in the modern world. The Hakkas of Sarawak: Sacrificial Gifts in Cold War Era Malaysia Kee Howe Yong (McMaster University) 2013 / 6 x 9 / paper / 240 pp / 978-1-4426-1546-5 / US & CDN $28.95 Available as an ebook This ethnography tells the story of the Hakka Chinese in Sarawak, Malaysia, who were targeted as communists or communist sympathizers in the 1960s and 1970s because of their Chinese ethnicity. Being Mãori in the City: Indigenous Everyday Life in Auckland Natacha Gagné (Université Laval) 2013 / 6 x 9 / paper / 368 pp / 978-1-4426-1413-0 / US & CDN $33.95 Being Mãori in the City is based on years of fieldwork, living with Mãori families, and 250 hours of interviews. Grounded in ethnography of everyday life in Auckland, it is an investigation of what being Mãori means today. For more information, visit utppublishing.com 23 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 23 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Horizons We Are Now a Nation: Croats between ‘Home’ and ‘Homeland’ Daphne N. Winland (York University) 2013 / 6 x 9 / paper / 240 pp / 978-1-4426-1603-5 / US & CDN $28.95 Available as an ebook The first book-length examination of responses to the war and independence of Croatia in the North American diaspora, We Are Now a Nation highlights the contradictions and paradoxes of contemporary debates about identity, politics, and place. ‘We Are Still Didene’: Stories of Hunting and History from Northern British Columbia Thomas McIlwraith (University of Guelph) 2012 / 6 x 9 / paper / 172 pp / 978-1-4426-1173-3 / US & CDN $23.95 Available as an ebook Detailing the history of the aboriginal village of Iskut, British Columbia over the past 100 years, this ethnography examines the community’s transition from subsistence hunting to wage work in trapping, guiding, construction, and service jobs. People of Substance: An Ethnography of Morality in the Colombian Amazon Carlos David Londoño Sulkin (University of Regina) 2012 / 6 x 9 / paper / 240 pp / 978-1-4426-1373-7 / US & CDN $29.95 Available as an ebook People of Substance is a lively, accessible ethnography of a complex Indigenous group of people of the Colombian Amazon. The author examines this group’s understandings and practices relating to selfhood, social organization, livelihood, and symbolism. Dimensions of Development: History, Community, and Change in Allpachico, Peru Susan Vincent (St. Francis Xavier University) 2012 / 6 x 9 / paper / 224 pp / 978-1-4426-1271-6 / US & CDN $26.95 Available as an ebook Dimensions of Development traces the “development” of Allpachico, a village in the Peruvian central highlands. It examines four aid projects in the area, each following distinct international trends, within the wider context of state and global political and economic systems. 24 Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 24 16-08-09 4:59 PM Anthropological Horizons From Equality to Inequality: Social Change among Newly Sedentary Lanoh Hunter-Gatherer Traders of Peninsular Malaysia Csilla Dallos (St. Thomas University) 2011 / 6 x 9 / paper / 368 pp / 978-1-4426-1122-1 / US & CDN $37.95 Available as an ebook From Equality to Inequality examines the deterioration of the egalitarian society once enjoyed by the Lanoh hunter-gatherers of Peninsular Malaysia. It provides rich empirical data on integration, leadership competition, self-aggrandizement, marginalization, and feuding kinship groups. Invaders as Ancestors: On the Intercultural Making and Unmaking of Spanish Colonialism in the Andes Peter Gose (Carleton University) 2008 / 6 x 9 / paper / 404 pp / 978-0-8020-9617-3 / US & CDN $39.95 Available as an ebook Invaders as Ancestors explores an alternative response to colonization beyond the predictable resistance narrative, presenting instead a creative form of transculturation under the agency of the Andeans. Kaleidoscopic Odessa: History and Place in Contemporary Ukraine Tanya Richardson (Wilfrid Laurier University) 2008 / 6 x 9 / paper / 240 pp / 978-0-8020-9563-3 / US & CDN $33.95 Available as an ebook Kaleidoscopic Odessa is an exemplary ethnographic portrait of a city where many residents consider themselves separate and distinct from the country in which they live. It explores the tensions between local and national identities in a post-Soviet setting. Beyond Bodies: Rain-Making and Sense-Making in Tanzania Todd Sanders (University of Toronto) 2008 / 6 x 9 / paper / 288 pp / 978-0-8020-9582-4 / US & CDN $31.95 Beyond Bodies examines sensibilities about gender through an ethnography of rainmaking rites. It considers the meaning of ritual practices in a society in which gender is not as bound to the body as it is in the Euro-American imagination. For more information, visit utppublishing.com 25 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 25 16-08-09 4:59 PM Archaeology Introducing Archaeology, Second Edition Robert J. Muckle (Capilano University) 2014 / 7.5 x 9.25 / paper / 304 pp / 978-1-4426-0785-9 US & CDN $52.95 Available as an ebook “Muckle has written a textbook that conveys all of the excitement, uncertainty, and deep insight that accompanies that wonderful and complicated thing we call archaeology. This is the perfect example of how archaeology can be presented to students in an accessible and inviting way while maintaining intellectual integrity.” – Jason De Leon, University of Michigan Introducing Archaeology offers a lively alternative to many other texts. While covering traditional elements of archaeology, including methods and prehistory, the book also integrates the key principles of curriculum reform for the twenty-first century, as outlined by the Society for American Archaeology. The second edition highlights recent developments in the field and includes a new chapter on archaeology beyond mainstream academia. It also integrates more examples from popular culture, including mummies, tattoos, pirates, and global warming. What results is a surprisingly fresh and contemporary take on archaeology, one that situates the discipline within, but also beyond, the academy. CONTENTS 1. Situating Archaeology 2. Looking at Archaeology’s Past 3. Managing Archaeology in the Early Twenty-First Century 4. Comprehending the Archaeological Record 5. Working in the Field 6. Working in the Laboratory 7. Reconstructing Culture History 8. Reconstructing Ecological Adaptations 9. Reconstructing the Social and Ideological Aspects of Cultures 10. Explaining Things of Archaeological Interest 11. The Archaeology of Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow ONLINE INSTRUCTOR RESOURCES Visit www.introducingarchaeology.com for free chapter-by-chapter student resources, including: Chapter summaries Learning objectives Study questions Web links Downloadable tables Additional readings 26 Anthropology Instructor’s manual PowerPoint slides Test bank Exhibit library Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 26 16-08-09 4:59 PM Archaeology RECENTLY PUBLISHED! Articulating Dinosaurs: A Political Anthropology Brian Noble (Dalhousie University) 2016 / 6 x 9 / paper / 512 pp / 978-1-4426-2705-5 US & CDN $47.95 Available as an ebook In this remarkable interdisciplinary study, anthropologist Brian Noble traces how dinosaurs and their natural worlds are articulated into being by the action of specimens and humans together. Following the complex exchanges of palaeontologists, museums specialists, film- and mediamakers, science fiction writers, and their diverse publics, he witnesses how fossil remains are taken from their partial state and re-composed into astonishingly precise, animated presences within the modern world, with profound political consequences. The book focuses on two of the most iconic and gendered dinosaurs: Tyrannosaurus rex (the “king of the tyrant lizards”) and Maiasaura (the “good mother lizard”). Reading Archaeology: An Introduction Edited by Robert J. Muckle (Capilano University) 2007 / 7 x 9 / paper / 366 pp / 978-1-5511-1876-5 US & CDN $52.95 Designed as a supplement to introductory texts in archaeology, Reading Archaeology offers selections from scholarly journals and books as well as from semi-scientific periodicals and the popular press. Readings are chosen based on their potential to stimulate student interest and introduce a diversity of archaeological literature in all its major forms. Reading Archaeology pairs well with Muckle’s core text, Introducing Archaeology, which follows the same thematic organization, but can easily be used alongside any other introductory archaeology text. SPECIAL COMBINED PRICE Reading Archaeology: An Introduction may be ordered together with Introducing Archaeology at a special discounted price. For more information, please contact [email protected]. For more information, visit utppublishing.com 27 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 27 16-08-09 4:59 PM Indigenous Studies On Being Here to Stay: Treaties and Aboriginal Rights in Canada Michael Asch (University of Alberta) 2014 / 6 x 9 / paper / 232 pp / 978-1-4426-1002-6 US & CDN $24.95 Available as an ebook Why should Canada’s original inhabitants have to ask for rights to what was their land when non-Aboriginal people first arrived? This question lurks behind every court judgment on Indigenous rights, every demand that treaty obligations be fulfilled, and every land-claims negotiation. Addressing these questions has occupied anthropologist Michael Asch for nearly thirty years. In On Being Here to Stay, Asch retells the story of Canada with a focus on the relationship between First Nations and settlers. Truth and Indignation: Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Indian Residential Schools Ronald Niezen (McGill University) 2013 / 6 x 9 / paper / 192 pp / 978-1-4426-0630-2 US & CDN $26.95 Available as an ebook Truth and Indignation offers the first close and critical assessment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission as it unfolds. Niezen uses interviews with survivors and oblate priests and nuns, as well as testimonies, texts, and visual materials produced by the Commission to raise important questions. Thoughtful, provocative, and uncompromising in the need to tell the “truth” as he sees it, Niezen offers an important contribution to our understanding of TRC processes in general, and the Canadian experience in particular. ALSO AVAILABLE 28 Indigenous Peoples of North America: A Concise Anthropological Overview Applied Anthropology in Canada: Understanding Aboriginal Issues, Second Edition Robert J. Muckle (Capilano University) Edward J. Hedican (University of Guelph) 2012 / 6 x 9 / paper / 208 pp / 978-1-4426-0356-1 / US & CDN $26.95 Available as an ebook 2008 / 6 x 9 / paper / 320 pp / 978-0-8020-9541-1 / US & CDN $32.95 Available as an ebook Anthropology Fall 2016 / Spring 2017 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 28 16-08-09 4:59 PM Index Afghanistan Remembers 5 Ancestral Lines 15 Anthropology Matters 1 Applied Anthropology in Canada 28 Articulating Dinosaurs 27 Asch, Michael 28 Back Door Java 18 Bao, Sarula 6 Barker, John 15 Barrett, Stanley R. 9 Being Mãori in the City 23 Between History and Tomorrow 20 Beyond Bodies 25 Brewer, Carolyn 6 Bridgman, Rae 19 Butler, Shelley Ruth 18 Causey, Andrew 7 Contested Representations 18 Counts, David R. 20 Counts, Dorothy Ayers 20 Crowther, Gillian 11 Culhane, Dara 7 Culturing Bioscience 16 Dallos, Csilla 25 Daswani, Girish 22 Davidov, Veronica 15 Dawson, Allan Charles 23 Deeply Rooted in the Present 15 Different Kind of Ethnography, A 7 Dimensions of Development 24 Dossa, Parin 5 Drawn to See 7 Dyck, Noel 17 Eating Culture 11 Elliott, Denielle 7 Erickson, Paul A. 8, 9 Fedorak, Shirley A. 1, 5 Fields of Play 17 Forth, Gregory 21 From Equality to Inequality 25 Gagné, Natacha 23 Global Inequality 12 de González, Laura Tubelle 2 Gose, Peter 25 Hakkas of Sarawak, The 23 Hamdy, Sherine 6 Heart of Helambu 21 Hedican, Edward J. 10, 28 Hidden Heads of Households 18 History of Anthropological Theory, A 8 In Light of Africa 23 Indigenous Peoples of North America 28 Inequality, Poverty, and Neoliberal Governance 20 Ingram, Mark 17 Introducing Archaeology 26 Invaders as Ancestors 25 Kaleidoscopic Odessa 25 Kane, Eileen 5 Kenny, Mary Lorena 15, 18 Kenny, Michael G. 4 Khan, Nichola 13 Krautwurst, Udo 16 Land of Weddings and Rain, The 22 Lankauskas, Gediminas 22 Legacies of Violence 22 Life Among the Yanomami 20 Lissa 6 Loewe, Ronald 17 Long Night at the Vepsian Museum 15 Looking Back, Moving Forward 22 Love Stories 16 Lyon-Callo, Vincent 20 Made in Madagascar 16 Manning, Paul 16 Maya or Mestizo? 17 McGill, Kenneth 12 McIlwraith, Thomas 24 McLean, Athena 19 Meneley, Anne 9, 21 Mental Disorder 13 Menzies, Charles R. 17 Merchants in the City of Art 15 Milanese Encounters 22 Mirzeler, Mustafa Kemal 23 Moretti, Cristina 22 Muckle, Robert J. 2, 26, 27, 28 Murphy, Liam D. 8, 9 Newberry, Jan 18 Niezen, Ronald 28 Noble, Brian 27 Nye, Coleman 6 O’Neill, Tom 21 On Being Here to Stay 28 Over the Next Hill 20 People of Substance 24 Person in Dementia, The 19 Peters, John F. 20 Pop Culture 5 Posthumanism 13 Public Anthropology 10 Reading Archaeology 27 Readings for a History of Anthropological Theory 9 Red Flags and Lace Coiffes 17 Remembering Nayeche and the Gray Bull Engiro 23 Richardson, Tanya 25 Rites of the Republic 17 Sanders, Todd 25 Scheffel, David Z. 19 Schiller, Anne 15 Sider, Gerald 20 Smart, Alan 13 Smart, Josephine 13 Smillie, Kirsten 4 Sorge, Antonio 22 Steckley, John L. 18 Stories of Culture and Place 4 StreetCities 19 Sulkin, Carlos David Londoño 24 Svinia in Black and White 19 Thiessen, Ilka 19 Through the Lens of Anthropology 2 Tournaments of Value 21 Trickster 5 Truth and Indignation 28 Vincent, Susan 24 Waiting for Macedonia 19 Walsh, Andrew 16 We Are Now a Nation 24 ‘We Are Still Didene’ 24 White Lies about the Inuit 18 Why the Porcupine Is Not a Bird 21 Winland, Daphne N. 24 Yong, Kee Howe 23 Young, Donna J. 9 For more information, visit utppublishing.com 29 UTP-HE-2016-17_Anthropology-Cat_PRESS_rv.indd 3 16-08-09 4:59 PM To Order Canada & US Customer Order Department, University of Toronto Press 5201 Dufferin Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M3H 5T8 Phone: (416) 667-7791 Fax: (416) 667-7832 or toll free Phone: 1-800-565-9523 Fax: 1-800-221-9985 Email: [email protected] We do our best at UTP Higher Education to keep our book prices low. 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