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Carolyn L. White

CLW at Burning Man 2 On Sabbatical: 2012-2013

In residence: Takt Kunstprojektraum, Berlin (1/7/12-3/31/12)

Associate Professor, Anthropology; Mamie Kleberg Chair in Historic Preservation

  • Director of the Historic Preservation Program
  • Ph.D., Boston University
  • Ansari Business, Room 501A
  • clwhite@unr.edu
  • (775) 682-7688

Specializations

Historical archaeology, historical archaeology of the west, archaeology of the contemporary world, archaeology of the ephemeral and temporary, material culture, museum studies, historic preservation, North America, Hawaii, and England

Research

My research interests center on historical archaeology in the Americas and as a global endeavor, material culture, the construction of identity, gender, and archaeological method and theory. I am interested in engaging new theoretical and methodological perspectives to understand material culture and to approach the past. My recent research explores personal adornment as a class of material culture and as a means for exploring the construction of identity along gender, class, age, and ethnicity. I am currently engaged in several projects: daily life in 19th-century multicultural Aurora, Nevada; the trans-Atlantic trade in personal adornment, the study of ranching on the Big Island of Hawaii; the exploration of Depression-Era rural landscapes in the Black Rock Desert; and the archaeology of Burning Man.

I am the Director of the Anthropology Research Museum and work with ethnographic and archaeological collections in this context. I am co-editor of the Guides to Historical Artifacts Series (with Timothy J. Scarlett, Michigan Tech). This series presents comprehensive guides to classes of historical artifacts commonly found in excavations, archives, museums, and private collections in North America.

I direct the Historic Preservation program and I am the advisor for the undergraduate minor in Museum Studies.

I welcome enquiries from prospective masters and doctoral students in historical archaeology and material culture studies.

Teaching

  • Historical Archaeology
  • Historic Preservation
  • Seminar in Archaeology and Prehistory
  • Material Culture Seminar
  • Archaeology of Gender and Identity
  • Archaeological Laboratory Methods
  • Museum Studies
  • Collections Research
  • Museum Training for Anthropologists

Selected Publications

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University of Nevada, Reno

University of Nevada, Reno
1664 N. Virginia Street
Reno,  NV  89557-0208

(775) 784-1110
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