Nancy J. Parezo - Hidden Scholars: Women Anthropologists and the Native American Southwest
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Hidden Scholars: Women Anthropologists and the Native American Southwest
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Women Anthropologists and the Native American Southwest
Nancy J. Parezo, Editor
Foreword by Nathalie F. S. and Richard B. Woodbury University of New Mexico Press / Albuquerque
Page iv
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hidden scholars: women anthropologists and the Native American Southwest / Nancy J. Parezo, editor. 1st ed. p. cm. Based on a conference held Mar. 1986 in Tucson, Ariz. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 0-8263-1428-7 (cloth) 1. Women anthropologistsSouthwest, NewBiography. 2. Anthropology Southwest, NewHistory. 3. Indians of North AmericaSouthwest, NewStudy and teaching. I. Parezo, Nancy J. GN20.H53 1993 301'.092'2dc20 93-9994 CIP
1993 by the University of New Mexico Press All rights reserved.
First edition.
Designed by B. Williams & Associates
Page v
To Lita Osmundsen who stretched our vision and to all future Southwesternists
Page vii
Contents
Foreword
Nathalie F. S. and Richard B. Woodbury
ix
Preface
xi
Acknowledgments
xxi
Anthropology: The Welcoming Science
Nancy J. Parezo
3
Matilda Coxe Stevenson: Pioneer Ethnologist
Nancy J. Parezo
38
Elsie Clews Parsons in the Southwest
Louis A. Hieb
63
Daughters of Affluence: Wealth, Collecting, and Southwestern Institutions
Susan Brown Mcgreevy
76
"Not in the Absolute Singular": Rereading Ruth Benedict
Barbara A. Babcock
107
Among Women: Gender and Ethnographic Authority of the Southwest, 19301980
Deborah Gordon
129
Women Researchers and the Yaquis in Arizona and Sonora
Kathleen Mullen Sands
146
Gladys Reichard among the Navajo
Louise Lamphere
157
Women in Applied Anthropology in the Southwest: The Early Years
Katherine Spencer Halpern
189
Women Archaeologists in the Southwest
Linda S. Cordell
202
The Contributions of Esther S. Goldfrank
Charles H. Lange
221
Women in Southwestern Linguistic Studies
Leanne Hinton
233
Zuni Potters and The Pueblo Potter: The Contributions of Ruth Bunzel
Margaret A. Hardin
259
In the Realm of the Muses
Nancy J. Parezo and Margaret A. Hardin
270
The Women Who Opened Doors: Interviewing Southwestern Anthropologists
Jennifer Fox
294
Women on the Periphery of the Ivory Tower
Shelby J. Tisdale
311
Conclusion: The Beginning of the Quest
Nancy J. Parezo
334
References Cited
369
About the Authors
413
Index
415
Page ix
Foreword
The southwestern scholars presented in this volume have perhaps not been so much hidden as taken for granted, merging with the shadows like the pines in a forest where the oaks are more prized for their timber. We have had the advantage of knowing many of these women personally as teachers, friends, or colleagues and have learned about others from the comments of men and women who knew them. These portraits seem wonderfully true and sympathetic. Yet, although the existence of these women was certainly acknowledged and their work respected, they were too often a part of the background of southwestern studies, and they rarely achieved positions of leadership as timbers in the profession's structure. As time has passed their roles and their contributions have become ever less familiar to the new generation. Hidden Scholars corrects this neglect and brings the women into the prominence they deserve alongside their male contemporaries.
But this is not just a volume celebrating the role of women in anthropology. It adds up to a comprehensive survey of southwestern anthropology, offering historic depth and critical comment that extend beyond the geographic area and contribute substantially to the history of anthropology in the United States.
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