September 2011 African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter
Greetings!
The September 2011 Newsletter is now available online at: http://www.diaspora.uiuc.edu/newsletter.html
In September's Newsletter, we feature: articles by Christina Brooks, Ywone Edwards Ingram, Bula Sirika Wayessa, Diana diZerega Wall, Nan A. Rothschild, Flordeliz T. Bugarin, and Eleanor King; news reports and announcements; and a book review by Rachel L. Horlings. A table of contents is set out below.
Please contact our editorial team of Whitney Battle-Baptiste, Kelley Deetz, Christopher Barton, and John McCarthy if you have essays, analysis papers, book reviews, project reports, announcements, or news updates that you'd like to contribute to the African Diaspora Archaeology Network (ADAN) and Newsletter. This Newsletter is published quarterly, in March, June, September, and December.
Cheers,
Whitney
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** Articles, Essays, and Reports **
Exploring the Material Culture of Death in Enslaved African Cemeteries in Colonial Virginia and South Carolina, by Christina Brooks
More than Memory: Representing an African American Neighborhood at the Ravenscroft Site, by Ywone Edwards Ingram
Buna Qalaa: A Quest for Traditional Uses of Coffee Among Oromo People with Special Emphasis on Wallaga, Ethiopia, by Bula Sirika Wayessa
The Seneca Village Archaeological Excavations, Summer 2011, by Diana diZerega Wall and Nan A. Rothschild
Through the Challenges, Archaeology Blossoms at Howard University, by Flordeliz T. Bugarin and Eleanor King
** News and Announcements **
Editors' Corner, by Whitney Battle-Baptiste and Kelley Deetz
New Books and Journals: The Anatomy of Blackness: Science and Slavery in an Age of Enlightment; Ripe for Emancipation; Black Feminist Archaeology; Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage; Heritage and Society.
** Upcoming Conferences **
American Anthropology Association
Plains Anthropological Conference
Southeastern Archaeological Conference
Midwest Archaeological Conference
Council for Northeast Historical Archaeology Conference
** Book Reviews **
Review of "Recent Themes in the History of Africa and the Atlantic World: Historians in Conversation," by Rachel L. Horlings
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