Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Me
In the depths of the Depression, two girls were born to Jewish parents in New York City. One, in 1933, […]
Alice Beck Kehoe (B.A., Barnard College, 1956, Ph.D., Anthropology, 1964, Harvard University) conducted archaeological and ethnographic fieldwork with her husband Thomas F. Kehoe in Montana (U.S.), Alberta, and Saskatchewan (Canada), and independently carried out ethnographic work with Blackfoot, Cree, Dakota, and Aymara, and ethnohistoric research on these nations and on the histories of American archaeology and North American First Nations. She taught at University of Nebraska (Lincoln) and for thirty-one years until retirement in 2000, at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She is now Professor of Anthropology, emeritus, at Marquette University and continues to work as above. Her publications include, among others, North American Indians: A Comprehensive Account (3 editions, 1981, 1992, 2006, Prentice-Hall); North America Before the European Invasions (2017, Routledge); The Land of Prehistory: A Critical History of American Archaeology (1998, Routledge); Shamans and Religion: An Anthropological Exploration in Critical Thinking (2000, Waveland); Militant Christianity: An Anthropological History (2012, Palgrave/Macmillan); A Passion for the True and Just: Felix and Lucy Kramer Cohen and the Indian New Deal (2014, University of Arizona Press); and edited volumes including, with Peter R. Schmidt, Archaeologies of Listening (2019, University Press of Florida).
In the depths of the Depression, two girls were born to Jewish parents in New York City. One, in 1933, […]