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  Faculty:
Lisa Frink, Associate Professor
Dr. Frink


Interests: Colonialism studies, ethnoarchaeology, gender, technology, and production, social identity, oral history, hunter-gatherers, architecture and space, Arctic, North America.

Colonialism studies are key to understanding hunter-gatherer behavior - relied upon by archaeologists in building models of past behavior. Descendent North Americans were (are) not passive recipients of colonial (post-colonial) social structures, ideologies, and material culture but active agents in the complex processes of transformation, mitigation, acquiescence, and resistance. One way to examine the past in the present is through ethnoarchaeological studies. Ethnoarchaeologists focus on the present interactions of people with materials in order to understand the formation, patterns, and meaning of the archaeological record. As a research strategy, ethnoarchaeologists use a range of approaches to understand the relationships of material culture to culture as a whole but in general attempt to document social, economic, and ideological aspects of modern behavior which may leave identifiable marks in the archaeological record.

Selected Publications

2008.  The Beauty of "Ugly" Eskimo Cooking Pots. Lisa Frink (with Karen Harry). American Antiquity 49(1):103-120

2007
. Storage and Status in Precolonial and Colonial Coastal Western Alaska. Current Anthropology 48(3):349-374

2006. Social identity and the Yup’ik Eskimo village tunnel system in precolonial and colonial western Alaska. Integrating the Diversity of 21st Century Anthropology: The Life and Intellectual Legacies of Susan Kent. W. Ashmore, M. Dobres, S. Nelson, and A. Rosen, eds. Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association. Berkeley: U of California Press 16/1:109-125.

2005. (Edited with Kathryn Weedman). Gender and Hide Production. AltaMira Press, Walnut Creek.

2004. (with Kelly J. Knudson, Brian W. Hoffman, T. Douglas Price). Chemical characterization of Arctic soils: Activity area analysis in contemporary Yup’ik fish camps using ICP-AES. Journal of Archaeological Science 31:443-456.

2003. (with Brian W. Hoffman and Robert D. Shaw). Ulu knife use in western Alaska: A comparative ethnoarchaeological study. Current Anthropology 44/1:116-122.

2002. (Edited with Rita S. Shepard and Gregory A Reinhardt). Many Faces of Gender: Roles and Relationships through Time in Indigenous Northern Communities. University Press of Colorado, Boulder and University of Calgary Press, Calgary.

The University of Arizona Press
introduces a new series  


 The Archaeology of Colonialism in North America
Lisa Frink and Aubrey Cannon, Series Editors

The Archaeology of Colonialism in North America is a new series developed to highlight current research on colonialism in North America. This series is dedicated to illuminating the wide range of methodological strategies (archaeology, ethnoarchaeology, oral history, historical sources) used to understand processes of colonialism.  In response to the developing concerns about colonialism and its effects on populations, the series integrates research on local, cultural, and historical complexities of the colonial experience, as well as on interactions between people and their material, social, and intellectual worlds. The series seeks to actively represent the growing number of descendant North American perspectives in archaeology by highlighting indigenous scholars.

The editors are currently inviting projects that thoughtfully engage with theoretical issues on the complexities of the colonial experience. The goal of the series is to foster a broad understanding of the nature of colonialism across North America, with an emphasis on underpublished or relatively marginalized archaeology of regions such as Alaska, the Canadian Arctic, and Subarctic areas.

The Press. The University of Arizona Press has a deserved reputation for producing superior volumes in archaeology, anthropology, and ethnohistory.  

The Editors. Lisa Frink, Ph.D. is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and is the current Archaeology Program Chair-Elect of the American Anthropological Association. Aubrey Cannon, Ph.D. is professor of anthropology at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada.  

We would like to invite manuscripts of 200-300 typescript pages, including notes and bibliography, with 10-20 illustrations and tables. Single-authored manuscripts are preferable, but we will also accept edited volumes and educational textbooks. Authors of prospective manuscripts are invited to send inquiries to any of the following editors or to contact University of Arizona Press

Lisa Frink, Ph.D.  

Assistant Professor of Anthropology

University of Nevada Las Vegas
4505 Maryland Pkwy Box 455003
Las Vegas, NV 89154-5003

lisa.frink@unlv.edu

Aubrey Cannon, Ph.D.

Professor of Anthropology


McMaster University
Hamilton, Ontario
L83 4L9 Canada

cannona@mcmaster.ca 

Allyson Carter, Ph.D.

Acquiring Editor  


University of Arizona Press
355 S. Euclid Suite 103
Tucson, AZ 85719-6654

acarter@uapress.arizona.edu www.uapress.arizona.edu


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