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Dive into the research topics where Nancy J. Parezo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nancy J. Parezo.


Western Historical Quarterly | 1996

Hidden scholars : women anthropologists and the Native American Southwest

Nancy J. Parezo

Analyzes the role women scholars have played understanding and interpreting Native American cultures of the Southwest.


Journal of Anthropological Research | 2018

Nomenclature Wars: Ethnologists and Anthropologists Seeking to Be Scientists, 1840–1910

Don D. Fowler; Nancy J. Parezo

Scholarly disciplines are ever-changing and continuously debated constellations of intellectual heritage and contemporary issues. This article discusses debates over anthropological nomenclature, anthropometric indices, and museum exhibit design in the development of European and American anthropology from its ethnological beginnings in the 1840s through nineteenth-century evolutionism to the establishment of the Boasian historical particularist approach after 1904. It also outlines the impacts of those debates and disagreements on the subsequent development of the “four-field approach” in American-university-based anthropology programs. The transitions from ethnology to evolutionism to particularism can be followed through arguments over nomenclature, anthropometrics, and the content and design of museum exhibits, as nascent anthropologists defined and redefined their subfield(s) of study and attempted to become part of the burgeoning Science Establishment of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Europe and North America. The arguments and their (sometimes) resolutions laid the foundations for twentieth-century university-based anthropology programs and ethnographic and archaeological exhibits in anthropology and natural history museums. The article is, thus, a contribution to the developmental history of anthropology in Europe and North America.


Archive | 2015

Museums: Sites for Producing Anthropology that Matters

Nancy J. Parezo

Museums are now and always have been core sites of anthropological activity, but in the game of demonstrating “newness” or “originality” for all our activities this is often forgotten. The fact that museums have been and are now sites for the caring of fundamental evidence that anthropology is a discipline that helps society face and answer fundamental philosophical questions, shows that they are key research sites from which to conduct anthropology as a socially-supported profession with specialized and value knowledge. In the quest to produce and disseminate knowledge that matter, museum have anthropologists have undertaken and still undertake socially relevant research and activities.


Archive | 2007

Anthropology Goes to the Fair: The 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition

Nancy J. Parezo; Don D. Fowler


Archive | 1996

Paths of Life: American Indians of the Southwest and Northern Mexico

Thomas E. Sheridan; Nancy J. Parezo


Archive | 1983

Navajo Sandpainting: From Religious Act to Commercial Art

Nancy J. Parezo


Archive | 2013

Archaeology in the Great Basin and Southwest: Papers in Honor of Don D. Fowler

Nancy J. Parezo; Joel C. Janetski


Archive | 2007

Anthropology Goes to the Fair

Nancy J. Parezo; Don D. Fowler


Ethnohistory | 1995

Preserving the Anthropological Record

M. Estellie Smith; Sydel Silverman; Nancy J. Parezo


KIVA: Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History | 2015

An Anthropologist's Arrival: A Memoir

Nancy J. Parezo

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Shirley A. Leckie

Henderson State University

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