4-0875 “SLEEPING WITH AN ELEPHANT”: TRACES, TIDEMARKS AND LEGACIES OF AN ENGAGED CANADIAN ANTHROPOLOGY
Share |
Friday, November 18, 2011: 13:45-17:30

Abstract is available to registrants only. Please log in or register to view abstract text.

This session would be of particular interest to:
Those involved in mentoring activities, Students, Teachers of Anthropology in Community Colleges, Practicing and Applied Anthropologists
Organizers:  Janice E Graham (Dalhousie University)
Chairs:  Deirdre Meintel (Universite de Montreal)
Discussants:  Gabriela Vargas-Cetina (Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan), Julia D Harrison (Trent University), Steffan Igor Ayora Diaz (Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan), Gilles Bibeau (Université de Montréal), Michael Asch (The University of Victoria ) and Ida S Susser (Hunter College)
13:45
Challenging Isolationism: Canada As the Ethnographic "Other" of Native American Studies
Regna D Darnell (University of Western Ontario and University of Western Ontario)
14:00
Northern Plainsmen Revisited
Peter H Stephenson (University of Victoria)
14:15
Canadian Anthropology, Minorities and Human Rights
Francine Saillant (Laval University)
14:30
Ethnography In a Cold Climate: Reflections On Anthropology In Canada
Richard Borshay Lee (University of Toronto)
15:15
Engaging Indigenous Healing In Canada and Belize
James B Waldram (University of Saskatchewan)
15:30
Cosmopolitanism and Tolerance: Anthropological Idioms In and for Québec?
Marie N LeBlanc (Université du Québec à Montréal )
16:15
Contested Ground: Mining and Anthropology In Canada
Catherine Elizabeth Coumans (MiningWatch)
16:30
16:45
Discussant
Ida S Susser (Hunter College)
17:00
Discussant
Michael Asch (The University of Victoria )
17:15
Discussant
Gilles Bibeau (Université de Montréal)
17:30
Discussant
Gabriela Vargas-Cetina (Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan)
17:45
Discussant
Julia D Harrison (Trent University)
18:00
Discussant
Steffan Igor Ayora Diaz (Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan)

Media Education Foundation

Duke University Press

Sponsors:
Wiley-Blackwell
Oxford University Press
Microsoft Research