Marc Anthony Boglioli - Drew University



CURRICULUM VITAE

Marc Anthony Boglioli

Dept. of Anthropology

Drew University

36 Madison Avenue

Madison, NJ 07979

APPOINTMENTS AT DREW

Department of Anthropology

Associate Professor: Spring 2010 -

Assistant Professor: Fall 2005-present

Visiting Assistant Professor: Fall 2004-Spring 2005

Adjunct Professor: Fall 2003

Behavioral Science Program

Adjunct Professor: Spring 2004

OTHER EMPLOYMENT

Raritan Valley Community College, Department of Social Sciences and Humanities

Adjunct Professor, Spring 2004: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology; Introduction to Native North Americans

Adjunct Professor, Fall 2003: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology

University of Wyoming, Department of Anthropology and American Indian Studies

Adjunct Professor, Spring 2003: Introduction to Native North American Cultures

St. Michael’s College, Department of Sociology/Anthropology

Adjunct Professor, Summer 2001: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology

Independent Study Advisor, Summer 2001: Ecological Anthropology

Adjunct Professor, Spring 2001: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology

Adjunct Professor, Summer 2000: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology

Adjunct Professor, Spring 2000: Anthropological Perspectives on Gender

University of Wisconsin - Madison, Department of Anthropology

Teaching Assistant, Fall 1998: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Human Diversity

Teaching Assistant, Spring 1999: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Human Diversity

EDUCATION

University of Wisconsin – Madison

Ph.D., Cultural Anthropology, 2004

Dissertation Title: “A Matter of Life and Death: A Cultural Analysis of Hunting in Rural Vermont”

Dissertation Committee: Neil Whitehead (Chair), Maria Lepowsky, Kirin Narayan, Thomas Heberlein, Paul Nadasdy

Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N.J.

B.A., Anthropology; Biology minor, 1991

Hunterdon Central High School, Flemington, N.J., 1987

PUBLICATIONS

2009. A Matter of Life and Death: Hunting in Contemporary Vermont. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.

2009. Illegitimate Killers: the symbolic ecology and cultural politics of coyote-hunting tournaments in Addison County, Vermont. Anthropology and Humanism. 34: 2: 203-18 (December).

2008. Review of Michael Harkin and David Lewis’ (eds.) Native American’s and the Environment: Perspectives on the Ecological Indian. Lincoln: University of Nebraska. Society and Natural Resources, Volume 21, Issue 9

2004. Review of Peter Nabokov’s A Forest of Time. Ethnohistory Vol. 51, No. 2: 453-54 (Spring 2004).

2000. “Civil Conflict and Savage Unity: Cross-Cultural Assumptions in Ecological Anthropology”. Anthropology of Work Review Vol. xxi, no. 2: 18-21.

“Deer Camp in Vermont”. Anthropology Newsletter, Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin - Madison, vol.17, Fall 1998.

PUBLICATIONS IN PROCESS

Drew colleague, Allan Dawson, and I are currently drafting a prospectus for an edited-edition based on the panel (“Claiming Nature: ‘Race, Ethnicity and the Politics of Belonging”) we organized for the upcoming meetings of the American Anthropological Association.

Theoretical piece tentatively titled “Ecological Occidentalism: Encountering the Noble Savage in the Backwoods of Vermont” to be submitted to American Anthropologist or American Ethnologist

OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

Academic Talks and Presentations

Organizer of panel, “Claiming Nature: ‘Race, Ethnicity and the Politics of Belonging” for the 2011 meetings of the American Anthropological Association, Wednesday, November 16, 2011 in Montreal.

“Pure Vermont: The Racial Politics of Belonging In a Rural Euro-American Homeland”, talk to be presented at the 2011 meetings of the American Anthropological Association, Wednesday, November 16, 2011 in Montreal.

“Anthropological Reflections on Hunting in Addison County, Vermont”, talk presented for Middlebury College’s Woodin Environmental Studies Colloquium Series, September 16, 2010.

“Ecological Occidentalism and the Persistence of the "West" as an Essentialized (and essential) Category in Ecological Anthropology”. Talk presented at the 2010 meetings of the Canadian Anthropological Society, Montreal, June 3rd, 2010.

“A Matter of Life and Death: Hunting in Contemporary Vermont”, talk presented at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umea, Sweden, February 11, 2009

“Illegitimate Killers: the symbolic ecology of coyote-hunting tournaments in Addison County, Vermont”. Talk presented at the 2008 International Symposium on Social Science and Resource Management, Burlington, Vermont, June 12

“Illegitimate Killers: the symbolic ecology of coyote-hunting tournaments in Addison County, Vermont”. Talk presented at the 47th Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association, Amherst, Massachusetts

“Exposed Canines: Vermont Coyote-Hunting Tournaments and the Contested Meaning of Hunting”. Talk presented at the 2007 Annual Meetings of the American Anthropological Association

“Vermont Coyote-Hunting Tournaments and the Contested Meaning of Hunting”. Talk presented at the 2007 International Symposium on Social Science and Resource Management, Park City, Utah, June 20

“Coyotes Gone Wild: The Moral Management of Coyotes in Rural Vermont”. Talk presented at the 47th Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association in Ithaca, NY on April 22, 2007.

“An Ethnographic Analysis of Masculinity at Vermont Deer Hunting Camps”. Talk presented at the 2005 International Symposium on Social Science and Resource Management, Ostersund, Sweden, June 16-19.

“Preservation of Native American Sacred Sites”. Guest Lecturer, Department of Religion, Drew University (for Richard Lamborn), Fall 2004.

“Ethnographic Reflections on the ‘Section 106’ Consultation Process”. Talk presented at the 11th Annual Island in the Plains Black Hills Archaeological & Historical Symposium, May 3, 2003.

“In Search of Solid Ground: Hunting and the Localization of Modernity in Rural Vermont”. Talk presented at the 2002 meetings of the American Anthropological Association as member of panel, Cultural and Economic Change in the Rural United States

“The Times They Are A-Changin’.” Invited speaker for the Research-In-Progress Seminar series at the Center for Research on Vermont, University of Vermont, October 1, 2002

“No Women, No Work, No Worries: Masculinity at Vermont Deer Hunting Camps”.

Talk presented at 2001 meetings of the American Anthropological Association

“‘To Me a Tree is Heat’: Urban Hegemony in Environmental Discourse”. Talk presented at 2001 meetings of The Canadian Anthropological Society as member of the panel, Environmental Policies, Practices, and Discourses

“Civil Conflict and Savage Unity: Cross-Cultural Assumptions in Ecological Anthropology”. Talk presented at 1999 AAA meetings as member of the panel, American Environments South to North: Nature, Indigenes and Others in Globalization

“A Matter of Love and Death: An Anthropological Analysis of Hunting in Vermont”.

Invited speaker for the Research-In-Progress Seminar series at the Center for Research on Vermont, University of Vermont, April 1999

“Masculinity at Vermont Deer Camps”. Guest lecturer, Department of English,

University of Vermont, April 1999

“Hunting Meanings”. Guest lecturer, Department of Anthropology,

University of Wisconsin - Madison, March 1999

Government Publications

Ethnohistorical Overview of Bighorn National Forest. December 31st, 2004. Completed with assistance from Nancy Stroupe (University of Arizona).

Ethnohistorical Overview of the Medicine Bow National Forest. December 15, 2002. Completed with assistance from Katherine Hejtmanek (Washington University, St. Louis) and Nancy Stroupe (University of Arizona)

“Douglas”. Community history of Douglas, Wyoming. Submitted to Laramie District of Medicine Bow National Forest October 18, 2002.

“Glenrock”. Community history of Glenrock, Wyoming. Submitted to Laramie District of Medicine Bow National Forest October 18, 2002.

“Rock River”. Community history of Rock River, Wyoming. Submitted to Laramie District of Medicine Bow National Forest October 18, 2002.

“Riverside”. Community history of Riverside, Wyoming. Submitted to Laramie District of Medicine Bow National Forest October 18, 2002.

Applied Anthropoogy

Research Director, Rocky Mountain Ethnohistory Project (August 2001-September 2003) Project funded by the US Forest Service and executed by University of Wyoming, Department of Anthropology.

Conference Organization

Co-organized the Native American language preservation conference, “Reclaiming Our Heritage: An Indigenous Language Conference”, with Dr. Judith Antell (Director of American Indian Studies at the University of Wyoming) and several AIS students. The conference was held April 3&4, 2003 at the University of Wyoming.

COURSES TAUGHT AT DREW

Assistant Professor

Spring 2011: Wildlife and Culture; Gender and Culture; Culture and the Environment (grad school offering)

Fall 2010: Ecological Anthropology; College Seminar: Environmental Justice; Humanism and Cultural Studies: Native American Cultures and History

Spring 2010: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; Senior Seminar in Anthropology (topic: anthropology of violence); American Culture: Perspectives on Native North America (graduate school offering)

Fall 2009: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; History of Anthropological Theory; Cultural Ecology (name changed to Ecological Anthropology)

Spring 2009: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; Gender and Culture

Fall 2008: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; History of Anthropological Theory; Cultural Ecology

Spring 2008: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; Ethnographic Research Methods; Cultures, Economies, and Globalization

Spring 2007: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; Gender and Culture; Native North American Cultures

Fall 2006: FYS, Sports in America; Economic Anthropology

Spring 2006: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; Ethnographic Research Methods

Fall 2005: History of Anthropological Theory; Cultural Ecology; Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics

Visiting Assistant Professor

Spring 2005: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics; Gender and Culture; Ethnographic Research Methods

Fall 2004: History of Anthropological Theory; Cultural Ecology

Adjunct Professor, Spring 2004: Senior Seminar in Gender and Masculinity (Cross-listed with Women’s Studies)

Fall 2003: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics

SERVICE AT DREW

Elected Committees

2008-2009: Chair, University Senate

2007-2008: Chair, University Senate

2006-2007: University Senate

2005-2006: University Senate

Other Ad Hoc Committees, Advisory Groups, Task Forces, etc.

2009-2010: Socially Responsible Investment Committee

2008-2009: Diversity Working Group, Committee on Civic Engagement, Environmental Studies Committee

2007-2008: Business, Society, and Culture Advisory Committee, Committee on Civic Engagement, Environmental Studies Committee

2006-2007 Business, Society, and Culture Advisory Committee, Committee on Civic Engagement, Earth House Advisor

2005-2006 Business, Society, and Culture Advisory Committee, Liberal Arts Study Group, Earth House Advisor

Involvement with Student Organizations

2004-present: Earth House Advisor

2009-2010: ACLU Advisor

Service to Profession

2009-2010: Co-editor of the Northeastern Anthropological Association Newsletter

2008-2009: Co-editor of the Northeastern Anthropological Association Newsletter

2007-2008: Co-editor of the Northeastern Anthropological Association Newsletter; Reviewed “Hot Latin Boys: Racialized Discourses of Masculinity and Desire” for the journal Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power

Service to the Department

2008-2009: Anthropology Search Committee

2007-2008: Assessed learning outcomes of my spring 2008 Anth 4 class

2006-2007: Wrote a successful PIF grant proposal for a panel discussion on American Indian Education on behalf of the Department of Anthropology

2005-2006: Assisted in developing Anthropology Assessment Plan

Service to Environmental Studies and Sustainability

2007-2008: Served on ESS search committee

Service to Center for Civic Engagement

2007-2008: Served on CE job search committee

Service to College or University

2006-present: Advisor for five internships

2005-present: Advisor for six honors theses and reader for seven honors theses

2008-2009: Attended reception for accepted high school seniors

2006-2007: Arranged for anthropologist Uli Linke to be the keynote speaker for the Center for Holocaust/Genocide Studies’ annual Kristallnacht Commemoration

- Arranged for a student to conduct summer fieldwork with Bighorn National Forest archaeologists

2005-2006: Common Reading Session Leader

-Arranged for a student to conduct summer fieldwork with Bighorn National Forest archaeologists

-Accompanied students to Washington D.C. to attend ANWR rally

2004-2005: Drawing on contacts with the USDA Forest Service, I arranged for five anthropology majors to conduct archaeological fieldwork in the Bighorn National Forest. Not only did the students gain college credits and invaluable “hands-on” experience, but they were also exposed to the complexities of American Indian cultural resource management in the intermountain west.

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS

American Anthropological Association

American Ethnological Society

Anthropology and the Environment Section of American Anthropological Association

Society for Anthropology in North America

The Society for Cultural Anthropology

The Society for Humanistic Anthropology

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download