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Bring it Back, Move it Forward: Indigenous Resurgences in the Upper Mekong – Free Lecture, April 30th @ 4PM

Bring it Back, Move it Forward: Indigenous Resurgences in the Upper Mekong

Micah F. Morton
Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Southeast Asian Studies
Northern Illinois University.

Date: Wednesday, April 30, 2025
Time: 4 pm
Place: Sabin Hall G-90, 51, 3413 North Downer Avenue, Milwaukee WI

Abstract:

In this talk, I tell a story of defiance and resurgence, a story of one Indigenous community’s efforts to decolonize and reclaim the Ancestral domain of their collective identity. I draw on long-term fieldwork and sustained relationships with certain member of the Indigenous Akha community whose Ancestral territories are centered on the Upper Mekong and divided by the borders of Thailand, Myanmar/Burma, Laos, and China. I highlight the community’s work to ensure their Ancestors remain always living, and thus a meaningful and dynamic part of their and their descendants’ everyday lives and vice versa. A key part of the community’s decolonizing methods entails a concerted effort to rework their Ancestral Ways in a manner that makes them lighter to “carry” yet more relevant to their everyday lives and aspirations. I argue that via their work of cultural reappropriation and resurgence, Akha, not unlike many other Indigenous Peoples, can be seen as “going backward into the future.” Through their cultural work, Akha are sustaining and regenerating relationships with their Ancestors and their Ancestral practices, which are better conceived of not as the “past” but as a renewed and renewing source of a present and future that are recurrent and generative.

Abstracts for Annual Anthropology Student Union Symposium Due March 15, 2025

The Anthropology Student Union (ASU) is accepting abstracts for their annual research symposium. This year’s theme is “Career Readiness and Anthropology in the Real World” featuring Dr. Elizabeth Briody as the keynote speaker. Dr. Briody is a cultural anthropologist with a focus on cultural-change efforts. As the founder and principal of Cultural Keys LLC she has worked with the U.S Army Research Institute and NASA to change their culture. We are so excited to have her come to 51!

If you would like to submit an abstract, they are due March 15, 2025, and have a 200-word limit. You can submit abstracts to anthrostudentunion@gmail.com. There will be both poster and presentation sessions and it is open to anyone (undergraduates and graduate students). We hope to see you there!

 

Anthropology Colloquium, Wednesday 3/5 @ 4 PM: The Rise of Bronze Age Societies: A View from the Maros Culture (Southeastern Europe) presented by Dr. Amy Nicodemus

The Rise of Bronze Age Societies: A View from the Maros Culture (Southeastern Europe)

Presented by Amy Nicodemus
Associate Professor,  Dept of Archaeology & Anthropology, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse.

ٲٱ: Wednesday, March 5 2025
վ: 4 pm
Place:  Sabin Hall G-90,  51, 3413 North Downer Avenue, Milwaukee WI

Abstract:

The Bronze Age was a period of dramatic change. In Europe, we see the adoption of new technologies, the establishment of transcontinental exchange networks, and the development of more hierarchical social structures. The Carpathian Basin of Southeastern Europe was at the epicenter of these transformations. This lecture presents new research on the rise of Bronze Age societies through the lens of the Maros Culture (Serbia, Hungary, and Romania). Here, fortified tell settlements emerged as centers of craft production and long-distance trade, social and ritual activities, and elite power, fundamentally altering the cultural landscape of the region.

Free AIA Lecture: Sunday, Feb. 23rd @ 3 PM – Dr. Ashley Lemke Presents, “An Archaeology of Our Cultural World Submerged: Underwater Archaeology in the Great Lakes”

The Milwaukee Society of the AIA is pleased to have 51’s own Ashley Lemke (Anthropology) who will deliver an in-person lecture on “An Archaeology of Our Cultural World Submerged: Underwater Archaeology in the Great Lakes.”

Dr. Lemke’s talk will present research on the area below Lake Huron, exploring a preserved ice-age landscape and archaeological sites that date to 9,000 years ago. Investigations have documented stone-built hunting structures, including hunting blinds and recovered artifacts. Lemke will provide an overview of the research which includes the use of underwater robots, sonar, and virtual reality to explore the ancient Great Lakes and their flooded history.

Details can be found and on the flyer below.

Professor Ashley Lemke Featured in History Channel Show

51 Anthropology Professor Ashley Lemke, an expert in underwater archaeology, appears on The History Channel’s new show, “Mysteries Unearthed,” hosted by actor Danny Trejo.

Professor Lemke was interviewed to provide a scientific point of view about various underwater mysteries around the world.

Click on the link below to access the 51 Report article about Professor Lemke’s contributions to the show.

51 underwater archaeologist appears on History Channel show

Congratulations to PhD Candidate, Amy Klemmer, on her recent edited volume, Zooarchaeology Beyond Human Subsistence

PhD Candidate, Amy Klemmer and colleague, Gillian L. Wong, co-edited the recently published volume, Zooarchaeology Beyond Human Subsistence. In this volume, “they present seven groundbreaking chapters that delve into the diverse ways humans have interacted with animals in the past, as revelead through archaeological research into animal remains.” Zooarchaeology Beyond Human Subsistence is, “ideal for professionals and enthusiasts in archaeology, anthropology, zoology, biology, ecology, history, and beyond, this book offers a fresh perspective on zooarchaeology, emphasizing human-animal bonds, trade, ritual, and environmental impacts.”

You can purchase this volume through the University of Utah Press website below:

Join us at our next Department Colloquium, “Deciphering Diets”, presented by Dr. Margaret Bryer – Dec. 4th 4:00 PM

51 Anthropology SURF Students Present at Annual MAC Conference

Elsie Touchstone, Dr. Shannon Freire, and Rachel Stewart show off their speed dating cards at the MAC Conference

A new open-access archaeology lab has just dropped! 51 Support for Undergraduate Research (SURF) students Elsie Touchstone and Rachel Stewart along with their research mentor, Dr. Shannon Freire, presented their co-created Archaeological Dating Lab at the 2024 Midwest Archeological Conference (MAC) meeting. Use the QR code to access all relevant materials. The materials are published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. Stay tuned for additional posts about 51 Department of Anthropology students at the MAC!

 

 

 

Anthropology Department Colloquia Return Wednesday Dec. 4th

The Department of Anthropology will hold its first colloquium on December 4th at 4:00 PM in Sabin Hall, room G90 on the ground floor. Students, Faculty, and Public are all welcome to attend for free.

Unfortunately, our November 6th Colloquium has been cancelled due to illness.

More information coming soon!

 

Distinguished Professor Emerita, Trudy Turner, Receives Edward Spaights Plaza Award

Dr. Turner posing with Chancellor Mark Mone

Distinguished Professor Emerita of Anthropology, Dr. Trudy Turner, was honored on October 9th at the annual 51 Employee Excellence Awards Ceremony. Dr. Turner was a professor of Anthropology from 1977 to 2021 and served as the Secretary of the University for thirteen years.

Dr. Turner is internationally known as a leader in Primatology who has authored over 100 publications including two books. She is well-known for her pioneering use of genetics and advocacy for ethics and gender equality in her field.

Congratulations, Trudy, on being recognized for your incredible and inspiring career at UW-Milwaukee!

Dr. Turner posing with Dr. Emily Middleton