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Anne-Marie Cantwell, Ph.D.

Title:  Professor

Office: Hill Hall 623

Telephone:973-353-5331

email: acantwel@andromeda.rutgers.edu

 

 

 


Education


Research Interests Current Projects Publications

Research Interests

I am an archaeologist and my field work has largely been in eastern North America mainly in Illinois and New York.  My research has revolved around a number of distinct theoretical issues that are, nonetheless, loosely connected.  These include the role of trade in the development of social complexity in the mound building cultures of the pre Columbian interior of the United States; a new kind of urban archaeology that sees modern American cities as major archaeological sites to be studied in their entirety, firmly kinking the Native American to the more recent past into one chronicle; the comparative cultural-historical study of  the politics in the past, in general and of the talismanic qualities of human remains, in particular; and the ethical role of archaeologists in analyzing and repatriating human skeletal remains to community groups, especially to those living in today's Fourth World.  I am also interested in human rights issues as they relate to indigenous peoples .

 

Current Research Projects

I am interested in the idea of the of the past as a "political country" over whose territory governments, interest groups and citizens battle In studying the politics of the past, I plan to focus on the transformation of human skeletal remains, in different times and places, governments, revolutionaries, religions, emerging states, and ethnic groups into icons of a desired body politics. I have recently become interested in the 17th century encounters between the Algonquian peoples who lived in the Northeast and the arriving Europeans and Africans. With this material, I add to the collective memory of that time the major role that Native peoples played in the creation of urban landscapes in New York and other East coast cities.

Works in Progress

Monographs

Essays in Honor of Howard D. Winters. Co-Edited with Lawrence A. Conrad New York City's Archaeological Sites. With Diana Wall. Yale University Press.

Articles

The Fate of His Bones, the Oracle of His Ashes: The Use of Human Relics in the Construction of Society. 

The Politics of the Contested Past: Fourth World Peoples and First World Nation States. 

Wampage: An Algonquian Patriot in Seventeenth Century New York City. 

The History of New York City Archaeology. With Diana Wall.

Selected Publications:

Books

2001 Unearthing Gotham: the Archaeology of New York City. With Diana Wall. Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut.

2000 Ethics and Anthropology: Facing Future Issues in Human Biology, Human Rights, Globalism, and Cultural Property. Edited with Eva Friedlander and Madeleine Tramm. New York Academy of Sciences, New York, Paperback edition distributed by John Hopkins University Press.

1993 The Archaeology of New York City. Edited with Diana Wall. Special Publications No.1, Professional Archaeologists of New York City, New York, New York.

1984 Copper in Late Prehistoric Eastern North America. by C. Goodman. Editor. Northwestern University Archaeological Program and the Center for American Archeology, Kampsville, Illinois.

1981 The Research Potential of Anthropological Museum Collections. Edited with James B. Griffin, and Nan. Rothschild. New York Academy of Sciences. New York, New York

1980 Dickson Camp and Pond: Two sites of the Havana Tradition in the central Illinois Valley, Illinois State Museum. Reports of Investigation No.36, Dickinson Mounds Museum Anthropological Studies. Springfield, Illinois.

Chapters in Books

2000 'Who Knows the Power of His Bones?': Repatriation Redux. In Ethics and Anthropology: Facing Future Issues in Human Biology, Human Rights, Globalism, and Cultural Property.  Ed. by Anne-Marie Cantwell, Eva Friedlander, and Madeleine Tramm. pp.79-119. New York Academy of Sciences, New York, New York.

2000 Introduction. In Ethics and Anthropology: Facing Future Issues in Human Biology. Human Rights, Globalism and Cultural Propery. Ed. by Anne-Marie Cantwell, Eva Frielander, and Madeleine Tramm. pp.vii-xx. New York Academy of Sciences, New York,

l986 The relationship between universities and museums. In The Challenge of Folk Materials for New Jersey's Museums. The Museums Council of New Jersey. Trenton.

l986 Status report of the Society for American Archeology's NortheastRegional Conference. With Bert Salwen. In Regional Conferences Summary Report. Ed. by C. Irwin- Williams and D. Fowler. pp. 78-97. Society for American Archaeology Special Publication. Washington, D. C.

l98l The research potential of anthropological museum collections. With N. A. Rothschild. In The Research Potential of Anthropological Research Collections. Ed. By A-M. Cantwell, J. B. Griffin and N. A. Rothschild. New York Academy of Sciences, New York, New York.

l98l The future of the past. With N. A. Rothschild. In The Research Potential of Anthropological Museum Collections. Ed. by A-M. Cantwell, J. B. Griffin and N. A. Rothschild. New York Academy of Sciences. New York, New York.

l980 Dickson Camp and Pond: Two Sites of the Havana Tradition in the Central Illinois Valley. Illinois State Museum. Reports of Investigation No. 36, Dickson Mounds Museum Anthropological Studies. Springfield, Illinois

Selected articles and book chapters

2000 'Who Knows the Power of His Bones?': Repatriation Redux. In Ethics and Anthropology: Facing Future Issues in Human Biology, Human Rights, Globalism, and Cultural Property. Ed. by Anne-Marie Cantwell, Eva Friedlander, and Madeleine Tramm. pp. 79-119. New York Academy of Sciences, New York, New York.

1993 Something rare and strange: Reburial in New York City. Northeast Historical Archaeology 21-22:198-217. l990 The Choir Invisible: reflections on the living and the dead. Death Studies l4:601-616.

 

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