Preface
Introduction: Toward a Transnational Americanist Anthropology
Kathleen S. Fine-Dare and Steven L. Rubenstein
Part 1. A New Compass for Americanist Studies
1. Racing across Borders in the Americas: Anthropological Critique and the Challenge of Transnational Racial Identities
John M. Norvell
2. The Politics of Knowledge and Identity and the Poetics of Political Economy: The Truth Value of Dividing Bridges
Linda J. Seligmann
3. Reinventing Archaeological Heritage: Critical Science in a North/South Perspective
James A. Zeidler
Part 2. Transamerican Case Studies
4. Bodies Unburied, Mummies Displayed: Mourning, Museums, and Identity Politics in the Americas
Kathleen S. Fine-Dare
5. Crossing Boundaries with Shrunken Heads
Steven L. Rubenstein
6. Local Conflict, Global Forces: Fighting for Public Education in a New York Suburb
Jean N. Scandlyn
7. El Envio: Remittances, Rights, and Associations among Central American Immigrants in Greater Washington DC
Barbara Burton and Sarah Gammage
8. Global Indigenous Movements: Convergence and Differentiation in the Face of the Twenty-First-Century State
Les W. Field
9. What Can Americanists and Anthropology Learn from the Alliances between Indigenous Peoples and Popular Movements in the Amazon?
Leda Leitao Martins
Part 3. Americanist Reflections
10. That's Your Hopi Uncle: Ethical Borders in the Field
Enrique Salmon
11. The Dust Bowl Tango: Looking at South America from the Southern Plains
Peter McCormick
12. The Lizard's Dream
Steven L. Rubenstein and Kathleen S. Fine-Dare
Afterword: Fordism, Post-Fordism, and Americanist Anthropology
David L. Nugent
Contributors
Index