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Original Articles

What Kind of Subject of Study is “The Ancient Maya”?

Pages 295-311
Published online: 16 Aug 2006
 

Additional information

Notes on contributors

ROSEMARY A. JOYCE

ROSEMARY A. JOYCE, anthropological archaeologist and Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, is the author of Embodied Lives: Figuring Ancient Egypt and the Classic Maya (with Lynn Meskell, Routledge, 2003), The Languages of Archaeology: Dialogue, Narrative, and Writing (Blackwell, 2002), Gender and Power in Prehispanic Mesoamerica (University of Texas, 2001), and Cerro Palenque: Power and Identity on the Maya Periphery (University of Texas, 1991). She has coedited Mesoamerican Archaeology: Theory and Practice (with Julia A. Hendon, Blackwell, 2004), Beyond Kinship: Social and Material Reproduction in House Societies (with Susan D. Gillespie, University of Pennsylvania, 2000), Social Patterns in Pre-Classic Mesoamerica (with David C. Grove, Dumbarton Oaks, 1999), and Women in Prehistory: North American and Mesoamerica (with Cheryl Claassen, University of Pennsylvania, 1997). Her research interests are in materiality and identity, and her fieldwork since 1977 has taken place in northwest Honduras on the so-called “Maya frontier.”

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