Description

Book Synopsis
Biocultural or biosocial anthropology is a research approach that views biology and culture as dialectically and inextricably intertwined, explicitly emphasizing the dynamic interaction between humans and their larger social, cultural, and physical environments.

Table of Contents

Contributors, xv

Acknowledgements, xix

A biocultural tribute to a biocultural scholar: Professor George J. Armelagos, May 22, 1936–May 15, 2014, 1
Debra L. Martin & Molly K. Zuckerman

References, 6

1 Introduction: the development of biocultural perspectives in anthropology, 7
Molly K. Zuckerman & Debra L. Martin

Introduction, 7

The origins and development of the biocultural approach, 8

Using a biocultural model, 12

Difficulties in using the biocultural approach, 15

The case studies in this volume, 15

Conclusion, 24

References, 24

Notes, 26

Part I: Critical and synthetic approaches to biocultural anthropology

2 Exploring biocultural concepts: anthropology for the next generation, 29
R. Brooke Thomas

Introduction, 29

Background, 29

Case study: the Quechua of southern Peru, 1964 to the present, 31

Discussion, 41

Conclusion, 42

References, 44

Notes, 47

Endnotes, 47

3 Local nutrition in global contexts: critical biocultural perspectives on the nutrition transition in Mexico, 49
Thomas L. Leatherman, Morgan K. Hoke & Alan H. Goodman

Introduction, 49

Background, 49

Case study: the “coca-colonization” of diet in the Yucatán, 54

Conclusion, 61

References, 62

Notes, 65

Part II: Biocultural approaches to identity

4 Disease and dying while black: how racism, not race, gets under the skin, 69
Alan H. Goodman

Introduction, 69

Background, 72

Case study: race versus racism, 81

Discussion and conclusion, 85

References, 86

5 Beyond genetic race: biocultural insights into the causes of racial health disparities, 89
Christopher W. Kuzawa & Clarence C. Gravlee

Introduction, 89

Background, 90

Case study #1: hypertension in the African Diaspora, 99

Case study #2: does the experience of racial discrimination in the United States have intergenerational health consequences?, 101

Discussion and conclusion, 101

References, 102

6 Political economy of African forced migration and enslavement in colonial New York: an historical biology perspective, 107
Michael L. Blakey & Lesley M. Rankin-Hill

Introduction, 107

Background, 108

Case study, 109

Discussion, 125

Conclusion, 127

References, 129

Notes, 131

7 Identifying the First African Baptist Church: searching for historically invisible people, 133
Lesley M. Rankin-Hill

Introduction, 133

Case study: Afro-American biohistory, 134

Conclusion, 152

References, 153

Notes, 155

Part III: Biocultural approaches to health and diet

8 "Canaries in the mineshaft": the children of Kulubnarti, 159
Paul A. Sandberg & Dennis P. van Gerven

Introduction, 159

Case study: Nubia and Kulubnarti, 160

Conclusion, 176

Acknowledgments, 176

References, 176

9 Biocultural investigations of ancient Nubia, 181
Brenda J. Baker

Introduction, 181

Background, 183

Case study: operationalizing a biocultural investigation: the Bioarchaeology of Nubia Expedition, 191

Conclusion, 194

Acknowledgments, 194

References, 194

10 Life and death in nineteenth-century Peoria, Illinois: taking a biocultural approach towards understanding the past, 201
Anne L. Grauer, Laura A. Williams & M. Catherine Bird

Introduction, 201

Case study: life and death in nineteenth-century Peoria, 203

Discussion, 210

Conclusion, 212

Acknowledgments, 213

References, 213

11 Does industrialization always result in reduced skeletal robusticity?, 219
Ann L. Magennis & Joshua G.S. Clementz

Introduction, 219

Background, 220

Case study: testing ideas about robusticity and industrialization, 225

Discussion, 232

Conclusion, 235

Acknowledgments, 236

References, 237

12 Stable isotopes and selective forces: examples in biocultural and environmental anthropology, 241
Christine D. White & Fred J. Longstaffe

Introduction, 241

Background, 244

Case study: isotopes and epidemiological risk factors/synergies at Wadi Halfa and surrounding regions, 247

Discussion and conclusion, 252

Acknowledgments, 253

References, 254

13 The cuisine of prehispanic Central Mexico reconsidered: the "omnivore’s dilemma" revisited, 259
Randolph J. Widmer & Rebecca Storey

Introduction, 259

Case study: prehispanic cuisine of Central Mexico, 263

Conclusion, 272

Acknowledgments, 273

References, 274

Part IV: Biocultural approaches to infectious disease

14 The specter of Ebola: epidemiologic transitions versus the zombie apocalypse, 279
Ronald Barrett

Introduction, 279

Case study: Ebola and the epidemiological transitions, 282

Discussion and conclusion, 290

References, 291

Notes, 293

15 Beyond the differential diagnosis: new approaches to the bioarchaeology of the Hittite plague, 295
Nicole E. Smith-Guzmán, Jerome C. Rose & Kathleen Kuckens

Introduction, 295

Case study: investigating the cause of the Hittite plague, 297

Discussion and conclusion, 313

Acknowledgments, 313

References, 313

16 Paleoepidemiological and biocultural approaches to ancient disease: the origin and antiquity of syphilis, 317
Molly K. Zuckerman & Kristin N. Harper

Introduction, 317

Background, 319

Case study: biocultural and paleoepidemiological approaches to the origin and antiquity of syphilis, 324

Discussion, 328

Conclusion, 330

References, 331

Notes, 335

Part V: Biocultural approaches to understanding population dynamics

17 Population and disease transitions in the Åland Islands, Finland, 339
James H. Mielke

Introduction, 339

Background, 340

Case study: Åland archipelago, 346

Discussion, 352

Conclusion, 357

Acknowledgments, 358

References, 358

18 The hygiene hypothesis and the second epidemiologic transition: using biocultural, epidemiological, and evolutionary theory to inform practice in clinical medicine and public health, 363
Molly K. Zuckerman, Jonathan R. Belanich & George J. Armelagos

Introduction, 363

Background, 366

Case study: applying the hygiene hypothesis to practice in public health and clinical medicine, 373

Discussion and conclusion, 377

References, 379

19 An emerging history of indigenous Caribbean and circum-Caribbean populations: insights from archaeological, ethnographic, genetic, and historical studies, 385
Theodore G. Schurr, Jada Benn Torres, Miguel G. Vilar, Jill B. Gaieski & Carlalynne Melendez

Introduction, 385

Case study: exploring Caribbean genetic history, 387

Discussion, 394

Conclusion, 395

Acknowledgments, 396

References, 397

Notes, 402

20 Explorations in paleodemography: an overview of the Artificial Long House Valley agent-based modeling project, 403
Alan C. Swedlund, Lisa Sattenspiel, Amy Warren, Richard S. Meindl & George J. Gumerman III

Introduction, 403

Background, 407

Case study: the Artificial Long House Valley (ALHV) Project models, 408

Discussion, 419

Conclusion, 422

Acknowledgments, 424

References, 424

Part VI: Biocultural approaches to inequality and violence 21 Biocultural perspectives in bioarchaeology, 429
Bethany L. Turner & Haagen D. Klaus

Introduction, 429

Background, 430

Case study: understanding European contact in the Americas, 437

Conclusion, 446

Acknowledgments, 446

References, 447

Notes, 451

22 The poetics of violence in bioarchaeology: Integrating social theory with trauma analysis, 453
Ventura R. Pérez

Introduction, 453

Background, 454

Case study: the Sierra de Mazatán massacre, 458

Conclusion, 465

Acknowledgments, 467

References, 467

23 Broken bodies and broken bones: Biocultural approaches to ancient slavery and torture, 471
Debra L. Martin & Anna J. Osterholtz

Introduction, 471

Background, 474

Case study: slavery and torture in the prehispanic Southwest, 475

Discussion, 486

Conclusion, 487

References, 488

Notes, 490

Part VII: The next generation

24 Concluding thoughts: a bright future for students trained in using a biocultural perspective, 493
Debra L. Martin & Molly K. Zuckerman

Introduction, 493

Teaching, pedagogy, and ethics, 494

The past as a guide, 496

A bright future for biocultural scholarship, 496

References, 498

Notes, 498

Index, 499

New Directions in Biocultural Anthropology

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 18/10/2016
      ISBN13: 9781118962961, 978-1118962961
      ISBN10: 1118962966
      Also in:
      Archaeology

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Biocultural or biosocial anthropology is a research approach that views biology and culture as dialectically and inextricably intertwined, explicitly emphasizing the dynamic interaction between humans and their larger social, cultural, and physical environments.

      Table of Contents

      Contributors, xv

      Acknowledgements, xix

      A biocultural tribute to a biocultural scholar: Professor George J. Armelagos, May 22, 1936–May 15, 2014, 1
      Debra L. Martin & Molly K. Zuckerman

      References, 6

      1 Introduction: the development of biocultural perspectives in anthropology, 7
      Molly K. Zuckerman & Debra L. Martin

      Introduction, 7

      The origins and development of the biocultural approach, 8

      Using a biocultural model, 12

      Difficulties in using the biocultural approach, 15

      The case studies in this volume, 15

      Conclusion, 24

      References, 24

      Notes, 26

      Part I: Critical and synthetic approaches to biocultural anthropology

      2 Exploring biocultural concepts: anthropology for the next generation, 29
      R. Brooke Thomas

      Introduction, 29

      Background, 29

      Case study: the Quechua of southern Peru, 1964 to the present, 31

      Discussion, 41

      Conclusion, 42

      References, 44

      Notes, 47

      Endnotes, 47

      3 Local nutrition in global contexts: critical biocultural perspectives on the nutrition transition in Mexico, 49
      Thomas L. Leatherman, Morgan K. Hoke & Alan H. Goodman

      Introduction, 49

      Background, 49

      Case study: the “coca-colonization” of diet in the Yucatán, 54

      Conclusion, 61

      References, 62

      Notes, 65

      Part II: Biocultural approaches to identity

      4 Disease and dying while black: how racism, not race, gets under the skin, 69
      Alan H. Goodman

      Introduction, 69

      Background, 72

      Case study: race versus racism, 81

      Discussion and conclusion, 85

      References, 86

      5 Beyond genetic race: biocultural insights into the causes of racial health disparities, 89
      Christopher W. Kuzawa & Clarence C. Gravlee

      Introduction, 89

      Background, 90

      Case study #1: hypertension in the African Diaspora, 99

      Case study #2: does the experience of racial discrimination in the United States have intergenerational health consequences?, 101

      Discussion and conclusion, 101

      References, 102

      6 Political economy of African forced migration and enslavement in colonial New York: an historical biology perspective, 107
      Michael L. Blakey & Lesley M. Rankin-Hill

      Introduction, 107

      Background, 108

      Case study, 109

      Discussion, 125

      Conclusion, 127

      References, 129

      Notes, 131

      7 Identifying the First African Baptist Church: searching for historically invisible people, 133
      Lesley M. Rankin-Hill

      Introduction, 133

      Case study: Afro-American biohistory, 134

      Conclusion, 152

      References, 153

      Notes, 155

      Part III: Biocultural approaches to health and diet

      8 "Canaries in the mineshaft": the children of Kulubnarti, 159
      Paul A. Sandberg & Dennis P. van Gerven

      Introduction, 159

      Case study: Nubia and Kulubnarti, 160

      Conclusion, 176

      Acknowledgments, 176

      References, 176

      9 Biocultural investigations of ancient Nubia, 181
      Brenda J. Baker

      Introduction, 181

      Background, 183

      Case study: operationalizing a biocultural investigation: the Bioarchaeology of Nubia Expedition, 191

      Conclusion, 194

      Acknowledgments, 194

      References, 194

      10 Life and death in nineteenth-century Peoria, Illinois: taking a biocultural approach towards understanding the past, 201
      Anne L. Grauer, Laura A. Williams & M. Catherine Bird

      Introduction, 201

      Case study: life and death in nineteenth-century Peoria, 203

      Discussion, 210

      Conclusion, 212

      Acknowledgments, 213

      References, 213

      11 Does industrialization always result in reduced skeletal robusticity?, 219
      Ann L. Magennis & Joshua G.S. Clementz

      Introduction, 219

      Background, 220

      Case study: testing ideas about robusticity and industrialization, 225

      Discussion, 232

      Conclusion, 235

      Acknowledgments, 236

      References, 237

      12 Stable isotopes and selective forces: examples in biocultural and environmental anthropology, 241
      Christine D. White & Fred J. Longstaffe

      Introduction, 241

      Background, 244

      Case study: isotopes and epidemiological risk factors/synergies at Wadi Halfa and surrounding regions, 247

      Discussion and conclusion, 252

      Acknowledgments, 253

      References, 254

      13 The cuisine of prehispanic Central Mexico reconsidered: the "omnivore’s dilemma" revisited, 259
      Randolph J. Widmer & Rebecca Storey

      Introduction, 259

      Case study: prehispanic cuisine of Central Mexico, 263

      Conclusion, 272

      Acknowledgments, 273

      References, 274

      Part IV: Biocultural approaches to infectious disease

      14 The specter of Ebola: epidemiologic transitions versus the zombie apocalypse, 279
      Ronald Barrett

      Introduction, 279

      Case study: Ebola and the epidemiological transitions, 282

      Discussion and conclusion, 290

      References, 291

      Notes, 293

      15 Beyond the differential diagnosis: new approaches to the bioarchaeology of the Hittite plague, 295
      Nicole E. Smith-Guzmán, Jerome C. Rose & Kathleen Kuckens

      Introduction, 295

      Case study: investigating the cause of the Hittite plague, 297

      Discussion and conclusion, 313

      Acknowledgments, 313

      References, 313

      16 Paleoepidemiological and biocultural approaches to ancient disease: the origin and antiquity of syphilis, 317
      Molly K. Zuckerman & Kristin N. Harper

      Introduction, 317

      Background, 319

      Case study: biocultural and paleoepidemiological approaches to the origin and antiquity of syphilis, 324

      Discussion, 328

      Conclusion, 330

      References, 331

      Notes, 335

      Part V: Biocultural approaches to understanding population dynamics

      17 Population and disease transitions in the Åland Islands, Finland, 339
      James H. Mielke

      Introduction, 339

      Background, 340

      Case study: Åland archipelago, 346

      Discussion, 352

      Conclusion, 357

      Acknowledgments, 358

      References, 358

      18 The hygiene hypothesis and the second epidemiologic transition: using biocultural, epidemiological, and evolutionary theory to inform practice in clinical medicine and public health, 363
      Molly K. Zuckerman, Jonathan R. Belanich & George J. Armelagos

      Introduction, 363

      Background, 366

      Case study: applying the hygiene hypothesis to practice in public health and clinical medicine, 373

      Discussion and conclusion, 377

      References, 379

      19 An emerging history of indigenous Caribbean and circum-Caribbean populations: insights from archaeological, ethnographic, genetic, and historical studies, 385
      Theodore G. Schurr, Jada Benn Torres, Miguel G. Vilar, Jill B. Gaieski & Carlalynne Melendez

      Introduction, 385

      Case study: exploring Caribbean genetic history, 387

      Discussion, 394

      Conclusion, 395

      Acknowledgments, 396

      References, 397

      Notes, 402

      20 Explorations in paleodemography: an overview of the Artificial Long House Valley agent-based modeling project, 403
      Alan C. Swedlund, Lisa Sattenspiel, Amy Warren, Richard S. Meindl & George J. Gumerman III

      Introduction, 403

      Background, 407

      Case study: the Artificial Long House Valley (ALHV) Project models, 408

      Discussion, 419

      Conclusion, 422

      Acknowledgments, 424

      References, 424

      Part VI: Biocultural approaches to inequality and violence 21 Biocultural perspectives in bioarchaeology, 429
      Bethany L. Turner & Haagen D. Klaus

      Introduction, 429

      Background, 430

      Case study: understanding European contact in the Americas, 437

      Conclusion, 446

      Acknowledgments, 446

      References, 447

      Notes, 451

      22 The poetics of violence in bioarchaeology: Integrating social theory with trauma analysis, 453
      Ventura R. Pérez

      Introduction, 453

      Background, 454

      Case study: the Sierra de Mazatán massacre, 458

      Conclusion, 465

      Acknowledgments, 467

      References, 467

      23 Broken bodies and broken bones: Biocultural approaches to ancient slavery and torture, 471
      Debra L. Martin & Anna J. Osterholtz

      Introduction, 471

      Background, 474

      Case study: slavery and torture in the prehispanic Southwest, 475

      Discussion, 486

      Conclusion, 487

      References, 488

      Notes, 490

      Part VII: The next generation

      24 Concluding thoughts: a bright future for students trained in using a biocultural perspective, 493
      Debra L. Martin & Molly K. Zuckerman

      Introduction, 493

      Teaching, pedagogy, and ethics, 494

      The past as a guide, 496

      A bright future for biocultural scholarship, 496

      References, 498

      Notes, 498

      Index, 499

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