Wednesday, February 17, 2016

David Keller presents his work at Chicago's Camp Douglas on Thursday, February 25

We are thrilled to have David Keller, noted Chicago amateur historian and longtime resident, present his archaeological research at Chicago's Camp Douglas site. David is the managing director of the Camp Douglas Restoration Foundation as well as the author of two books: The Story of Camp Douglas, Chicago’s Forgotten Civil War Prison and Robert Anderson Bagby, Civil War Diary (Annotated) 1863-1865.

David has worked alongside DePaul's Dr. Michael Gregory in the archaeological excavations and artifact analyses of finds from Camp Douglas. Opened in 1861, Camp Douglas was a Union training and reception facility for over 40,000 Union soldiers in Chicago.  Camp Douglas became a prison camp, housing over 30,000 Confederate prisoners, from 1862 until it was demolished in 1865. Containing over 200 buildings on 60 acres, Camp Douglas was the most significant Civil War facility in Northern Illinois.

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Dr. Matthew Thomann parses the relationship between the State, AIDS, and sexual minorities in Africa

In a special edition of DOWiA, anthropologist Dr. Matthew Thomann presented his work in Cote d'Ivoir on Monday, February 15th. His presentation untangled the complicated relationship between AIDS care, NGOs, and sexual minorities as they are understood on Africa's South Atlantic Coast. His talk was the second in a series that departs from DOWiA's initial focus on archaeology and heritage-related presentations. Although it was a special Monday session of DOWiA, Dr. Thomann's presentation saw the DOWiA audience grow to its largest number yet.


Dr. Matthew Thomann presents at DOWiA 

Photo credit: Dr. Robert Rotenberg

Friday, February 12, 2016

Dr. Jay Sosa explained the colors and performed the choreography of Brazilian protest...

On 11 February 2016 Dr. Jay Sosa presented his work on the symbolism of Brazilian protest. His work demonstrates that protests and protesters are a diverse mix of people with varying commitments and interests in political issues. Dr. Sosa explained that protests are effective in maintaining a public foothold in defining important political issues even when participants lack a single, clearly-defined message. Dr. Sosa's presentation provided a significant complement to the DOWiA's inaugural schedule, as it moved away from archaeological examination and the politics of heritage and into a more expansive realm of anthropological investigation, in this case the symbolic analysis of protests. Dr. Sosa even performed some of the essential choreography of Brazilian protests he witnessed; alas, we didn't get a picture of his reenactment.