On today’s episode, Jessica chats with Dr. Shayla Monroe (Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University) and Debora Heard (Ph.D. Candidate in Anthropology at the University of Chicago). The three talk about Nubia and its people (both ancient and modern), why they have been overshadowed, and why they are important. We also talked about what got them interested in this topic, what they are studying now in Nubia, and how the war in Sudan has affected their work and their colleagues. Finally, we talk about where they would like to see the study of Nubia go, including their efforts to co-found the William Leo Hansberry Society.
LinksKathryn M. Buder Center for American Indian studies at Washington University in St. Louis - Ep 85
Boulder Ethnographic-Education Project: Indigenous Perspectives on Ethnography - Ep 84
Maroon Heritage in Dominica - Ep 82
Working with Indigenous Communities and Orangutan Conservation in Borneo - Ep 81
Lumbee Perspectives on Environment, Culture, and Community - Ep 80
The Intensive NAGPRA Summer Training and Education Program (INSTEP) - Ep 79
Browns Canyon National Monument - Ep 78
Esto'k Gna Somi Se'k [The Human Beings of Texas] - Ep 77
Changing Landscapes in Higher Education - Ep 76
The Ramblings of a Lakota Anthropologist on American Indians and Anthropology and Tribal Relations - Ep 75
Walking the Ancestors Home - Ep 74
Exploring the Ethics in Experimental Archaeology - Ep 73
Working with Indigenous Communities in the Philippines - Ep 72
Tribal Collaboration at Archaeology Southwest - Ep 71
Black Cemeteries - Ep 70
The Utes as a Forgotten People - Ep 69
Indigenous Fire and Climate Justice - Ep 68
PROMO - Finding Our Religion with Dr. Candace Lukasik - The Dirt 208
Makoons to Makwa: Early Career Archaeological Contracting - Ep 67
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