Research
The faculty in the Institute for Intercultural and Anthropological Studies at Western 麻豆传媒应用 University are involved in a variety of research initiatives.
- Dr. Jon Holtzman recently wrote a journal article titled 鈥淩ice, Beer and Salad: Varying Constructions of Craving in Japan鈥 which was published in Appetite. He also presented a paper titled 鈥淪hadowscape With Frieze of Goats鈥 at the Satterthwaite Colloquium for African Studies.
- Tim Bober's research interests have recently included Mesoamerican archaeology and the archaeology of the Fur Trade in the Great Lakes area. Tim has concentrated his Mesoamerican interests primarily in Mexican cultures like the Aztecs and Teotihuacan. He has also been involved in a public archaeology project entitled, The Fort St. Joseph Archaeology Project, investigating an 18th century French fort built near the 麻豆传媒应用 and Indiana border.
- Dr. Britt Hartenberger has focused her archaeological research on the production of stone tools and pottery in the Middle East, specifically southeastern Turkey during the Bronze and Iron Ages. In the summer of 2019, she joined the in Greece to conduct flotation and collect microdebris for investigating activities in a Classical period house. She is also working on publications of the pottery and lithics from the Ziyaret Tepe Archaeological Project in Turkey.
- Dr. Michael Nassaney has research interests that include the archaeology of eastern North America with a focus on colonialism, the fur trade, material analysis, public archaeology, and ethnohistory. He is the principal investigator of the Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project, an interdisciplinary program in community service learning that focuses on the 18th-century site of Fort St. Joseph in Niles, 麻豆传媒应用.
Collaborating Faculty
The following WMU faculty in other departments collaborate on anthropology and African American and African studies projects and research:
- Ann Miles, Department of Sociology
- Vin Lyon-Callo, Sociology
- Jackie Eng, Biology
Fort St. Joseph
Making archaeology accessible to the public is a major goal of the Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project, which is unearthing and interpreting the community's history.
IIAS Scholarly Works
Scholarly works published by faculty, students and alumni are stored for reference in WMU's ScholarWorks program. Honor's Theses, Master's Theses, Archaeological Reports, faculty books and images can be found .