Making History at the Frontier: Women Creating Careers as Practicing AnthropologistsISBN: 978-1-931303-29-3
Paperback
232 pages
September 2006, Wiley-Blackwell
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General Editor: Tim Wallace
Christina Wasson is an assistant professor in the
Department of Anthropology at the University of North Texas. She is
a linguistic anthropologist whose work explores the intersections
of communication, organizations, and technology. In addition, she
is interested in self-reflexively exploring the practices of the
discipline of anthropology, in both academic and applied/practicing
contexts, with a particular focus on gender issues. In 2002 she was
elected to the Committee on the Status of Women in Anthropology of
the American Anthropological Association (COSWA). She led
COSWA’s effort to conduct a national survey on academic
climate issues and helped build bridges between COSWA and the
National Association for the Practice of Anthropology. Christina
Wasson received her Ph.D. from Yale University. She has published
articles and book chapters in the fields of anthropology,
organization studies, and discourse studies on topics such as
language use in organizations, team decision making, and virtual
groupwork. She has also worked as a project manager in several
consulting firms. [email protected]
Tim Wallace is Associate Professor and Applied Anthropologist in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. His primary interests lie within the subfield of the anthropology of tourism. His most recent research has taken him to the communities around Lake Atitlan in the Guatemalan Highlands. He has carried out applied research work on tourism in Costa Rica, Hungary, and Madagascar. In addition, he has done applied work in Mozambique studying maize marketing; Ecuador for a potato marketing project; Togo, West Africa, to study economic development policy; Peru to research community development strategies in Peru; and, Hiroshima, Japan to study international education policy. He has also done research in North Carolina on farmers markets in Raleigh, North Carolina, and on socioeconomic responses to pest management practices among tomato and cabbage farmers in North Carolina. He has been President of the Southern Anthropological Association and the Association of North Carolina Anthropologists, was a member of the Executive Board of the Society for Applied Anthropology, and is coeditor of the NAPA Bulletin. He recently edited NAPA Bulletin 23 on "Tourism and Applied Anthropologists." ([email protected])