Education
PhD Stanford University 1996 MA Stanford University 1992 B.A. Wellesley College 1985 Junior year abroad Universidad de Sevilla, Seville, Spain 1983 American Field Service 4-month student exchange Mérida, Mexico 1980
Professional Experience / Employment History
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Duke University
Associate Professor, Department of Cultural Anthropology, 2001 - present
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Lewis and Clark College
Assistant Professor, Sociology/Anthropology Department, 1995-2001
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Asociación para el Avance de las Ciencias Sociales en Guatemala (AVANCSO) [Association for the Advancement of Social
Research Associate, 1992-1993
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Stanford University
Teaching Assistant, Department of Anthropology, 1990-1994
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International Institute of Boston
Bi-lingual Paralegal, 1989
pro-bono refugee law office
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Ford Foundation
Development Consultant, 1988
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The Guardian(New York),Report on Guatemala(Oakland, CA), Central America Monthly(Boston, MA)
Freelance Journalist, 1987-1989
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Jane C. Edmonds & Associates
Writer, 1987
minority-owned consulting firm on issues of race
and gender discrimination and managing diversity
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Project Bread/Hunger Hotline
Food Stamp Advocate, 1986
Awards, Honors, and Distinctions
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Franklin Humanities Institute Seminar for Interdisciplinary Studies, 2004-2005
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Latin American Studies Title VI research grant, 2004
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"Revisiting the Harvest of Violence" conference, Wenner-Gren Fellowship, January 2004
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Thomas Langford Lectureship Award, Duke University, May 2003
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Langford Award, Duke University, 2003
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Latin America Studies Title VI research grant, 2003
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Wenner-Gren grant for conference on "Revisiting the Harvest of Violence Anthropology and the Persistence of War in a Post-War Society", 2003
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Latin America Studies Title VI research grant, 2002
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Nominee, Alumni Distinguished Undergraduate Teaching Award, 2002
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Oregon Academy of Science, Teacher of the Year, 1998
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Vining-Davis Faculty-Student research fellowship, Lewis and Clark College, 1998
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Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society, 1996
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Mellon Fellowship in Anthrpology for dissertation, 1993
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National Science Foundation dissertation field research fellowship, 1992
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Field Research Grants, Department of Anthropology and Latin American Studies, Stanford University, 1990-1991
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Amanda Butler Pierce poetry award, Wellesley College, 1985
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Magna cum laude, Wellesley College, 1985
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Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society, Wellesley College, 1985
Recent Publications (More Publications)
- D.M. Nelson and Carlota McAllister. Revisiting Guatemala's Harvest of Violence. Duke University Press,
2010.
- D.M. Nelson. "100% OMNILIFE: Health, Economy, and the End/s of War." Revisiting the Harvest of Violence. Edited by McAllister, Carlot and Diane M. Nelson. 2010.
- D.M. Nelson. Reckoning: The Ends of War in Guatemala. Duke University Press,
February, February, 2009. [abs]
- D.M. Nelson. "Los efectos especiales del horror." Re-pensando la violencia. Edited by Julian Lopez García and Santiago Bastos. 2009.
- D.M. Nelson, "Review of Latin American Cyberculture and Cyberliterature". The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (2009).
Selected Talks
- Los efectos especiales del horror,” [Horror’s Special Effects]., Re-pensando la violencia, Antigua Guatemala, October, 2008
- Ajustando Cuentas en Guatemala pos-genocidio, AVANCSO, Association for the Advancement of Social Science, Guatemala City, July, 2008
- Reckoning the After/math of War in Guatemala, Number as Inventive Frontier, Johns Hopkins University, May, 2008
- Who Counts? War’s After/math in Guatemala, University of Minnesota, April, 2008
- Fixing or Rendering?: Post-War Horror, Reed College, February, 2008
- Horror’s Special F/X: Re/membering in Guatemala’s Peace Processing, Harvard University, February, 2008
- Means and End/s of Clandestine Life, Scenes of Secrecy conference, Duke University, 5 January 2008
- Reckoning Bio and Necro-Politics: Malaria Eradication in Guatemala, Syracuse University, October, 2007
- Instantiating Experimental State/s: Life, Duplicity, and Genocide in Guatemala, University of California - Irvine, April 18, 2007
- Who Counts? Financial Repair and the End/s of Guatemala's Civil War, Duke/UNC Annual Latin America conference, February, 2007
- Who Counts? Reckoning the After/Math of War in Guatemala, University of California-Davis, April, 2006
- "Life During Wartime: Cold War Biopolitics", Guatemala 1954 Conference, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne, April 2005
- "Living Beside One's Self: Duplicity and Reckoning in Postwar Guatemala", UC-San Diego, February 2005
- "Visual Culture in Postwar Guatemala: Rendering Memory", American University of Beirut, Lebanon, March 2005
- A Social Science Fiction of Malaria and Pharmakons,, Latin American Studies Association, Las Vegas, NV, October, 2004
- Pharmakon and the Colonial Laboratory of Modernity, Science and Literature Society, Durham, NC, October, 2004
- Subjectivizing the (Post) Human: Biopolitics, War and Malaria in Guatemala, Society for the Social Study of Science, Milwaukee, WI, November, 2002
- Do Microbes Have a Social Life? Malarial Bios and the "Facts of Life,", Society for the Social Study of Science, Paris, France, August 2004
- “My Body, Not Myself,” Torture and Democracy conference, CUNY Graduate Center, New York, October 2004
- "Dispossession and Possession: The Maya, Duplicity, and "Post" War Guatemala", Deprivation, Violence, and Identities Interdisciplinary Conference, the Mershon Center, Ohio State University, October 2003
- "I Want to Look Like You:' Mestizaje and Kin(d)-red in Guatemala", UNC Women's Studies Colloquium, March 2003
- "The Powers of Horror: Post-war Guatemala and Memory Work", University of Montana, March 2003
- I Want to Look Like You:’ Mestizaje and Kin(d)-red in Guatemala, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, October 2003
- "Co-memoration and Co-laboration: Horror's Special Effects in Post-War Guatemala", Witnessing in Latin America: Interdisciplinary Conversations, Princeton University, September 2002
- "Horror's Special Effects in Post-War Guatemala", University of Alberta, Canada, November 2002
- "Is Post-War Guatemala Pre-Democratic? How to have Optimism of the Will When You've Been Thrown Down", Workshop on Democratization in Latin America and South Asia. University of British Columbia, Vancouver, April 2002
- "Kinaesthesia and the Reverberations of Horror: The Special Effects of Memorializing in Guatemala", Hampshire College, January 2002
- "The Crux of the Matter? Two Sides, Two Faces, or do the Non-Duped Err?", Amherst College, January 2002
- "Anthropologist Discovers Legendary Two-Faced Indian in Guatemala! Margins and the Bamboozling of the State/s, School of American Research Advanced Seminar, April 2001
- "Desafios que Enfrentan a Las Mujeres Mayas", Kaqla' Mayan Woman's Organization seminar, Guatemala City, July 2000
- "Horror's Special Effects: Representing Genocide in Guatemala" "Upheaval and its Cultural Aftermath", lecture series, University of British Columbia, April 2000
- "Race, Mestizaje and Biopolitics", Distinguished Lecture Series, Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, University of California, San Diego, January 2000
- "Stumped Identities: The Mujer Maya as National, Ethnic, and Transnational Prosthetic", faculty seminar, University of British Columbia, April 2000
- "The Gender of the Prosthetic: Wounded Identities and the Mayan Woman in Post-War Guatemala", Drake University, Iowa, November 2000
- "The More You Kill the more You Will Live: The Maya, 'Race,' and the Biopolitical Economy of Peace in Guatemala", Duke University John Hope Franklin Seminars for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities, March 2000
- "The More You Kill the more You Will Live: The Maya, 'Race,' and the Biopolitical Economy of Peace in Guatemala", Workshop on "Race, Nature and Politics of Difference" University of California, Berkeley, February 2000
- "A Finger in the Wound: Race, Ethnicity, and Peace in Guatemala", International conference on Ethnic Conflict: The Human Dimension, Ohio University, May 2000
- "Desafios que Enfrentan a Las Mujeres Mayas" [Challenges Facing Mayan Women], Kaqla' Mayan Woman's Organization seminar, Guatemala City, July 2000
- "Horror's Special Effects: Representing Genocide in Guatemala", Art History lectures series on Upheaval and its Cultural Aftermath, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, April 2000
- "Stumped Identities: The Mujer Maya as National, Ethnic, and Transnational Prosthetic", faculty seminar, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, April 2000
- "The More You Kill the More You Will Live: Raciology, Violent Modernity, and Biopolitical Neo-Lamarckianism in Guatemala", Inaugural Irvine Seminar on the Anthropology of Modernity, University of California-Irvine, October 2000
- "A Transnational Frame-up: ILO Convention 169 and Constructions of Identity, Territory, and the Law", Conference at University of Michigan Program in Anthropology and History, Ann Arbor, MI, April 1999
- "An American Killing Field: A Round-Table Discussion on the Report of the Guatemalan Truth Commision", Yale University, April 1999
- "Cyborg Anthropology and the Prosthetics of Identification: Nation, Ethnicity, Gender, Anthropology", University of London, Center for Latin American Studies, October 1999
- "Is Truth Stranger than Journalism? Rigoberta Menchú's Political Past and Joking Matters", Columbia University, February 1999
- "Phantom Limbs and Invisible Hands", Princeton University, February 1999
- "Psycho-Killers and Final Girls: Horror and Re/Membering in Guatemala's Peace Processing Plant", Yale University, February 1999
- "The Assumption/s of Identity in Rigoberta Menchú's Stoll/en Past", Center for Literary and Cultural Studies, Harvard University, April 1999
- "The Bio-Politics of Blood in Post-War Guatemala: Genocide, Mayan Identity, and the Future of the Left", University of Sussex, England, October 1999
- "A Transnational Frame-up: ILO Convention 169 and Constructions of Identity, Territory, and the Law", Touching Ground: Descent into the Material/Cultural Divide Conference, Program in Anthropology and History, University of Michigan, April 1999
- "Etnostalgia y racismo: Maya, Ladino, y una reina de lagartos" [Ethnostalgia and Racism: Maya, Ladino, and a Queen of the Lizards], Universidad de San Carlos, Guatemala City, August 1999
- "Etnostalgia, el estado-nación, y una reina de lagartos" [Ethnostalgia, the Nation-State, and a Lizard Queen], Universidad Rafael Landivar, Quetzaltenango, Guatemala, July 1999
- "Identidad y Género" [Identity and Gender], Mayan Studies Conference, Universidad Rafael Landivar, Guatemala City, August 1999
- "Is Truth Stranger than Journalism? Rigoberta Menchú's Political Past and Joking Matters", Columbia University, February 1999
- "Is Truth Stranger than Testimonial? Rigoberta Menchú's Stoll/en Past", Wellesley College, April 1999
- "Prosthetic Self-Making and Informatics: Nation, the Maya, and La Mujer in Quincentennial Guatemala", Working Group on Local and Global Identities, Michigan State University, East Lansing, January 1999
- A series of three lectures concerning Mayan identity and the Nation-State at Cholsamaj, a Mayan research center, Guatemala City, June-August 1999
- Participant, "An American Killing Field: A Roundtable Discussion on the Report of the Guatemalan Truth Commission", Yale University, April 1999
- "Activismo Maya y ambivalencia Ladina: sitios del poder y la formación de la identidad Maya" [Mayan Activism and Ladino Ambivalence: Sites of Power and the Formation of Mayan Identity], ALMG (Guatemalan Mayan Language Academy) Guatemala City, July 1998
- "Chistes, género, e identidad: como la jujer maya apoya a los projectos de nación y étnia" [Jokes, Gender, and Identity: How the Mayan Woman Supports the Projects of Nation and Ethnicity], FLACSO (Latin America Social Science Faculty), Guatemala City, July 1998
- "El efecto piñata: ?porque golpeamos al estado y porque buscamos dulces?" [The Piñata Effect: Why do We Hit the State and Why Do We Want Sweets?], AVANCSO (Association for the Advancement of Social Sciences), Guatemala City, June 1998
- "Mestizaje corporal: género, etnia, nación - hacía una teoria del deseo" [Bodily Mestizaje: Gender, Ethnicity, Nation - Towards a Theory of Desire], CIRMA (Mesoamerican Research Center), Antiqua, Guatemala, July 1998
- "Peliculas del miedo e imagenes de violencia" [Horror Movies and Images of Violence], Museum of Modern Art, Guatemala City, June 1998
- "Phanton Limbs and Invisible Hands: The Mujer Maya as Prosthetic in Quincentennial Guatemala", University of California-Berkeley, October 1998
- "Psycho-Killers and Final Girls: Horror and Re/Membering in Guatemala's Peace Processing Plant", University of California-Davis, October 1998
- "Teorias del pos-moderno en la tarea de re-pensar el futuro de Guatemala" [Theories of the Postmodern in the Task of Re-thinking the Future of Guatemala], Center for Training and Development, Nuevo Amanecer, Guatemala City, July 1998
- "Third Cinema and the Politics of Ethnographic Film", Reed College, Portland, OR, January 1998
- "Maya Hackers and Prosthetic Gender: Body Image, Bodies Politic", Evergreen College, Olympia, WA, May 1997
- "Bodies that Splatter: Gender, "Race" and the Discourses of Mestizaje", Reed College, Portland, OR, March 1996
- "Bodies that Splatter: Gender, "Race" and the Discources of Mestizaje", Mestizaje study group, University of Califorinia-Davis Anthropology Department, April 1995
- "The Maya-hacker and the Cyberspatialized Nation-State: Modernity, Ethno-nostalgia, and a Lizard Queen in Guatemala", University of California-Davis, Anthropology Colloquium, April 1995
- "Etiquetas hostiles tomadas como símbolos de la identidad" [Hostile Markings Taken For Identity], Fifteenth Annual Guatemalan Mayan Language Academy Workshop, San Luis Peten, Guatemala, June 1993
Doctoral Theses Directed
Rocio Trinidad, (2007 - May, 2008)
Last modified: 2009/01/10 |