Awards of the Archaeology Division

Patty Jo Watson Distinguished Lecture

Gordon R. Willey Prize

Alfred Vincent Kidder Award

Student Diversity Travel Grant

Student Membership Award

AD Sponsorship of SAA Symposium

 

Patty Jo Watson Distinguished Lecture

Beginning with the 1989 Annual Meeting, the Archaeology Division inaugurated a series of Distinguished Lectures. Each lecturer delivers a talk at the Annual Meeting, and the distinguished lectures may subsequently be published in American Anthropologist.

Past Distinguished Lecturers

2008 Alison Wylie Legacies of Collaboration: Transformative Criticism in Archaeology
2007 Philip L. Kohl Shared Social Fields: Evolutionary Convergence in Prehistory and Contemporary Practice
2006 David Hurst Thomas Way Past Reburial and Repatriation: American Archaeology in the Active Voice
2005 Colin Renfrew Beyond the Sapient Paradox: Genetic and Cultural Trajectories
2003 Rosemary A. Joyce Doing Things: Anthropology as Archaeology
2002 Timothy Earle Who Makes Culture: Alternative Media for Social Expression and Control
2001 William Longacre Archaeology as Anthropology Revisited
2000 Wendy Ashmore Decisions and Dispositions:  Socializing Spatial Archaeology
1999 Theresa Singleton Other Voices, Other Times: Historical Archaeology and Perceptions of the Past
1998 Gil Stein Diasporas, Colonies and World Systems: Rethinking the Archaeology of Interregional Interaction
1997 Margaret Conkey Paleolithic Pathways: Archaeological Theory and Practice of the Deep Past
1996 Jeremy Sabloff The Past and Future of American Archaeology
1995 Patrick V. Kirch Microcosmic Histories: Island Perspectives on Global Change
1994 Carol Kramer The Quick and the Dead
1993 Mark Leone Historical Archaeology Of and Against the State
1992 George L. Cowgill Beyond Criticizing New Archaeology
1991 Elizabeth Brumfiel Breaking and Entering the Ecosystem: Gender, Class, and Faction Steal the Show
1990> Bruce Trigger Constraint and Freedom: A New Synthesis of Archeological Interpretation
1989 Charles Redman In Defense of the Seventies: The Adolescence of New Archaeology and Its Progeny in the Nineties

Gordon R. Willey Prize

This prize recognizes the best archaeology paper published in the American Anthropologist over a period of three years. Named after Professor Gordon R. Willey, the award recognizes a distinguished archaeologist who served as President of the AAA, in 1961. It encourages archaeologists to pursue Willey's well-known maxim (even if he did not first pen it!) that archaeology is anthropology or it is nothing.

The award winner is selected from those papers published in the American Anthropologist in the three calendar years previous to the year of the award (excluding the distinguished lectures). Since the inauguration of the award in 1997, the following papers have been selected for recognition:

2008 Barbara Voss From Casta to Californio: Social Identity and the Archaeology of Culture Contact
2007 Christopher Fisher Demographic and Landscape Change in the Lake Patzcuaro Basin, Mexico: Abandoning the Garden
2006 Barbara J. Mills The Establishment and Defeat of Hierarchy: Inalienable Possessions and the History of Collective Prestige Structures in the Pueblo Southwest
2005 
Katherine A. Spielmann
Feasting, Craft Specialization, and the Ritual Mode of Production in Small Scale Societies
2004
Brian S. Bauer and
R. Alan Covey
Processes of State Formation in the Inca Heartland (Cuzco, Peru)
2003
Lisa J. LeCount
Like Water for Chocolate: Feasting and Political Ritual among the Late Classic Maya at Xunantunich, Belize
2002
Susan D. Gillespie
Rethinking Ancient Maya Social Organization: Replacing "Lineage" with "House"
2001
James E. Snead
Science, Commerce, and Control:  Patronage and the Development of Anthropological Archaeology in the Americas
2000 Glenn Davis Stone
and  Christian  E. Downum
Non-Boserupian Ecology and Agricultural Risk: Ethnic Politics and Land Control in the Arid Southwest
1998 Patricia Crown and
Suzanne Fish
Gender and Status in the Hohokam Pre-Classic to Classic Transition
1997 Melinda Zeder After the Revolution: Post-Neolithic Subsistence in Northern Mesopotamia

In 2005 the Gordon R. Willey Endowment Fund was established as a permanent endowment to provide a stable income for the awarding of this prize.


Alfred Vincent Kidder Award

Established in 1950, the Alfred Vincent Kidder Award for Eminence in the Field of American Archaeology was given every three years to an outstanding archaeologist specializing in the archaeology of the Americas. The award has been given alternately to specialists in Mesoamerican archaeology and the archaeology of the Southwestern region -- areas that were both central to the pioneering and exemplary work of A. V. Kidder.

This award, presented by the AAA but selected by the AD, is now given every two years. The 2010 award will be for a specialist in the area of the Southwestern U.S. Nominations will be solicited in early 2010. They should include a cover letter of nomination, stating explicitly the qualifications and accomplishments of the nominee, and a CV. They will be reviewed by a specially selected Kidder Award Committee.

You may submit nominations by mail by addressing them to the Kidder Award Committee in care of the AD Secretary (click on Officers for address).

You may submit nominations by email by sending attachments, preferably in PDF format, to the AD Secretary (click on Officers for email address). Please put "Kidder Award nomination" in the subject line.

The deadline for nominations is February 10, 2010. The award will be presented at the 2010 AAA business meeting in New Orleans.

Past Kidder Award winners:

David C. Grove 2008
Jeffrey S. Dean 2006
George L. Cowgill and René Millon 2004
Linda S. Cordell 2001
Jeffrey R. Parsons 1998
Jesse D. Jennings 1995
Kent V. Flannery 1992
Richard B. Woodbury 1989
Ignacio Bernal 1986
Watson Smith 1983
William T. Sanders 1980
Emil W. Haury 1977
Gordon R. Willey 1974
Richard S. MacNeish 1971
Paul S. Martin 1968
Neil Judd 1965
Tatiana Proskouriakoff 1962
Charles C. DiPeso 1959
Samuel K. Lothrop 1956
Earl H. Morris 1953
Alfred Marston Tozzer 1950

 


Student Diversity Travel Grant

Established in 2004, these grants are intended to increase participation in AAA sessions and in archaeology more widely by students from historically under-represented populations. African American, Alaskan Native, American Indian or Native American, Asian American, Latino and Latina, Chicano and Chicana, and Pacific Islander students in archaeology are encouraged to apply for these travel grants to help defray costs associated with attending the AAA meeting. Archaeology students with disabilities are also eligible for this grant.

Up to four grants, of up to $600 each, will be awarded. Applications will be evaluated based on the following criteria:

All students who apply for a grant are also invited to arrange a meeting with any member of the AD Executive Committee during the annual meeting for professional advice and mentoring.

Recipients will be acknowledged and receive their award at the AD Business Meeting on Friday evening during the AAA meeting.

To apply, please submit the following: Please ask that the recommender submit the letter independently by the deadline.

Applications should be sent as an attachment to an e-mail to the Archaeology Division Secretary. Please include your last name in the name of the attachment. The Secretary’s contact information can be found in the list of AD Officers–see button at the top of this page.

APPLICATIONS ARE DUE BY SEPTEMBER 15.

If electronic submission of these materials is not possible, please contact the AD Secretary for a postal address.

Previous Travel Grant Winners:

2008 Edward Jolie University of New Mexico
  Karen Pereira University of Florida
  Dana Shew University of Denver
     
2007 Deanna Dartt-Newton University of Oregon
  Kelly Peterson McMaster University
  Kerry Thompson University of Arizona
     
2006 Jason J. González Southern Illinois University
  Olaf Jaime-Riveron University of Kentucky
  Ora V. Marek
University of California, Berkeley
  Sean Näleimale University of Hawai'i, Manoa
  Gina Quistiano Zavala Indiana University
     
2005
Sara L. Gonzalez
University of California, Berkeley

Desireé Reneé Martinez
Harvard University

Uzma Zehra Rizvi
University of Pennsylvania

Grace S. R. Turner
College of William and Mary
     
2004
Jason Patrick De Leon
Pennsylvania State University

Olivia Clementina Navarro-Farr
Southern Methodist University

Janet Six
University of Pennsylvania

Nawa Sugiyama
Arizona State University

Radhika Sundararjan-Bauer
University of Pennsylvania


Student Membership Award

The Archaeology Division (AD) seeks to support student membership in the AAA and in the AD to maintain and strengthen the representation of archaeology within the AAA. Beginning with the 2009 Annual Meeting in Philadelphia, the AD will award the next year’s membership in both AAA and AD to up to 20 students who present archaeological papers or posters at the annual meeting. This award has a value of between $75 and $135, depending on a student’s AAA membership status.

All students who present an archaeological paper or poster at the annual meeting are eligible to apply for this award. Up to three awards will be allocated specifically for undergraduates. If more than 20 eligible individuals apply, the awardees will be chosen by random methods.

To apply for the award, please send your application to Erika Roberts, student representative on the Archaeology Division Executive Committee. You may send your application through email or snail mail. Your paper or poster must have been accepted for presentation at the 2009 meeting.

Send applications to Erika Roberts at erobrts@ufl.edu.

Deadline for 2009 annual meeting is: October 1, 2009

Application should include:

If you have other questions, please contact AD president, Janet Levy, at jelevy@uncc.edu.



AD Sponsorship of SAA Symposium

The AD annually sponsors a symposium at the Society for American Archaeology Meeting.

Proposals for AD sponsorship for the 2010 SAA Meeting in St. Louis, MO (the 75th Anniversary Meeting), should be submitted by August 21, 2009. A decision will be made by August 31, 2009. The designation of AD sponsorship must be included with the submission to the SAA Program Committee by their deadline in September.

A proposal should include:

The major criterion for selection of AD sponsorship is how well the proposed symposium exemplifes a holistic anthropological approach to a topic in archaeology.

Please send complete proposals as an email attachment, in either MS Word or plain text format, to President-Elect Ben Nelson at bnelson@asu.edu by August 21, 2009.

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