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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Re-Collecting the Andean Dead: American Anthropology’s Peruvian Foundations at Harvard, 1863–1926
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SUMMARY:Re-Collecting the Andean Dead: American Anthropology’s Peruvian Foundations at Harvard, 1863–1926
DESCRIPTION:<p>	Speaker:<strong> Dr. Christopher Heaney</strong>,<strong> </strong>Assistant Professor of Latin American History at Penn State. Author of Empires of the Dead: Inca Mummies and the Peruvian Ancestors of American Anthropology (Oxford University Press, 2023) and Cradle of Gold: The Story of Hiram Bingham, a Real-Life Indiana Jones and the Search for Machu Picchu (2010).</p><p>	Moderated by: <strong>Harvard Andean Working Group</strong></p><p>	By 1873, seven years after the founding of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, over 400 of the 684 skulls in its collection were from the Andes. Thus began a specialization that linked Harvard to Peru, which one Andean archaeologist—Julio César Tello (Harvard AM, 1912), “the Boas of Peru”—used to point anthropology to a more complicated end. This entangled history of Peruvian science and Americanist anthropology reveals how Indigenous actors have redirected their study, a debt to recognize as American institutions account for their role in the hemispheric disinterment, excavation, and display of Indigenous kin.</p><p>	Presented in collaboration with the <a href="https://history.fas.harvard.edu/" title="">Harvard University Department of History</a>, the <a href="internal:/" title="">Harvard Department of Anthropology</a>, and the <a href="https://histsci.fas.harvard.edu/research/eswg" title="">Harvard History of Science Department's Early Sciences Working Group</a>.</p><p>	 </p><p>	<em>Contact information:</em> Manny Medrano <a href="mailto:mmedrano@g.harvard.edu">mmedrano@g.harvard.edu</a></p>
LOCATION:CGIS South, S-050
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20240206T221500Z
DTEND:20240206T234500Z
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