SOUTHWEST SEMINARS PRESENTS
VOICES FROM THE PAST 2016
MONDAY NIGHTS AT 6 PM AT HOTEL SANTA FE
LECTURES – 50 MONDAYS A YEAR
TO HONOR AND ACKNOWLEDGE THE NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM
A PUBLIC PROGRAM GRACIOUSLY ASSISTED BY HOTEL SANTA FE, A PICURIS PUEBLO ENTERPRISE
June 6 Meredith Davidson
Curator, 19th and 20th Century Collections and Curator, Setting the Standard: The Fred Harvey Company and Its Legacy, New Mexico History Museum
Fred Harvey, Harvey Girls, Harvey Houses & the Santa Fe Railroad
June 13 Dr. Matthew J. Liebmann
Associate Professor of Anthropology, Archaeology Program, Harvard University
Author, Revolt: An Archaeological History of Pueblo Resistance and Revitalization in
7th Century New Mexico; “Burn the Churches, Break Up the Bells”: The Archaeology of the Pueblo Revolt Revitalization Movement in New Mexico, A.D. 1680-1696 (Dissertation); Co-Editor (w/M. S. Murphy), Enduring Conquests: Rethinking the Archaeology of Resistance to Spanish Colonialism in the Americas; and (w/U.Z. Risvi), Archaeology and the Postcolonial Critique.
What Happened After 1492?
June 20 Dr. Mike Adler
Director, SMU-in-Taos and Department of Anthropology, Southern New Mexico University,
Editor, The Prehistoric Pueblo World, A.D. 1150-1350. Co-Editor (w/S. Bruning), The Futures of Our Pasts (under contract); and (w/H. Dick) Picuris Pueblo Through Tie: Eight Centuries at a Northern Rio Grande Pueblo.
Ancestral Puebloan Population Relocations: New Perspectives from Pot Creek Pueblo
June 27 Dr. Elizabeth A. Oster
Principal Investigator, Jemez Mountain Research Center
Cultural Resources Specialist, New Mexico Spaceport Authority
The 1540 Mixton War, Caxcan Diaspora and the Colonization of New Mexico
July 4 Karl Laumbach
Archaeologist, Associate Director of Research and Public Education, Human Systems Research, Inc.,
New Mexico, Las Cruces,
Massai: New Mexico’s Apache Kid
July 11 Dr. James F. Brooks
Professor of History and Anthropology, University of California-Santa Barbara
Editor, The Public Historian; and Confounding the Color Line: The Indian-Black Experience in North America; Author, A History of the Awat‘ovi Massacre; Captives and Cousins: Slavery, Kinship, and Community in the Southwest Borderlands; Former Director, SAR Press and Former President, School for Advanced Research
Mesa of Sorrows: The Awato’ovi Massacre
July 18 Sherry Robinson
Journalist and Author, Apache Voices: Their Stories of Survival As Told to Eve Ball;
and I Fought A Good Fight: A History of the Lipan Apaches (Winner, 2014 Fray Francisco Atanasio Dominguez Award, New Mexico Historical Society)
Lipan Apaches: Setting the Record Straight
July 25 Dr. R. Kyle Bocinsky
Archaeologist and Director, Sponsored Projects, Crow Canyon Archaeological Center;
Co-Author, w/(T. Kohler) ‘Complexity, Rigidity, and Resilience in the Ancient Southwest’,
in The Future in the Past: Historical Ecology Applied to Environmental Issues (in press),
(w/H.T. Foster, L. Paciulli, D. Goldstein, eds.)
Drought and Social Dynamics in the Ancient Southwest
August 1 Dr. Kathy Howard and Diana Pardue
Dr. Kathy Howard, Heard Museum Research Associate and Diana Pardue, Curator of Collections, Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona; Co-Curators, Heard Museum Exhibition and Co-Authors, Over the Edge: Fred Harvey at the Grand Canyon and in the Great Southwest
Over the Edge: Fred Harvey at the Grand Canyon and in the Great Southwest
August 8 Steve Post
Principal Investigator, Zia Consulting and Author, ‘Ten Thousand Years of Living in Santa Fe’, in History of an Ancient City, D.G. Noble, Ed.; and former Deputy Director (ret.),
Office of Archaeological Studies, Museum of New Mexico, Department of Cultural Affairs
Native American Scouts at the Santa Fe Presidio in the 1700’s
$12 at the door ~ or ~ $100 for the Series of 10 Lectures
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