1,179 research outputs found

    Anthropology & Open Access: An Interview with Jason Baird Jackson

    No full text
    During the last few weeks I had the chance to conduct an email based interview with Jason Baird Jackson about Open Access (OA), academic publishing, and anthropology..

    Chronicles of Oklahoma

    No full text
    Article discusses the history of the Yuchi tribe and their current practices through examination of their ceremonial ground camps. Jason Baird Jackson provides a detailed portrait of the people group and their daily lives

    Histories and Realignments: Museum Anthropology Review in a New Era

    No full text
    In an editorial, Museum Anthropology Review editor Jason Baird Jackson discusses the history of the journal as a context for explaining plans to reorient it to focus more closely on the work of the Mathers Museum of World Cultures and its museum and community partners; reducing the amount of unsolicited content published and increasing invited content arising from the research, exhibitions, and outreach work of the museum and its collaborators

    Histories and Realignments: Museum Anthropology Review in a New Era

    No full text
    In an editorial, Museum Anthropology Review editor Jason Baird Jackson discusses the history of the journal as a context for explaining plans to reorient it to focus more closely on the work of the Mathers Museum of World Cultures and its museum and community partners; reducing the amount of unsolicited content published and increasing invited content arising from the research, exhibitions, and outreach work of the museum and its collaborators

    Douglas G. Baird, Group 2

    No full text
    Douglas G. Baird (right), the Harry A. Bigelow Professor of Law and dean of the Law School at the University of Chicago. He is pictured with Scott Turow, lawyer and author. University of Chicago Photographic Archive, [apf1-11871], Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library. View information about rights and permissions.https://chicagounbound.uchicago.edu/douglas_baird_images/1002/thumbnail.jp

    A Different, Different Direction

    No full text
    In an editorial, Museum Anthropology Review editor Jason Baird Jackson discusses new developments for the journal, highlighting its new status as a publication of the Indiana University Press. The move of the journal’s publishing home from the Mathers Museum of World Cultures to the Indiana University Press necessitates reversing an editorial plan previously announced. As has been true for all but the past year of its history, the journal welcomes scholarly and practitioner contributions from across the full breadth of the fields of museum anthropology, museum-based folklore studies, and material culture studies

    A Different, Different Direction

    No full text
    In an editorial, Museum Anthropology Review editor Jason Baird Jackson discusses new developments for the journal, highlighting its new status as a publication of the Indiana University Press. The move of the journal’s publishing home from the Mathers Museum of World Cultures to the Indiana University Press necessitates reversing an editorial plan previously announced. As has been true for all but the past year of its history, the journal welcomes scholarly and practitioner contributions from across the full breadth of the fields of museum anthropology, museum-based folklore studies, and material culture studies

    State Fairs: Growing American Craft: Four Questions for Exhibition Contributing Curator Jon Kay

    No full text
    Jon Kay served as a contributing curator for the Smithsonian Institution’s exhibition State Fairs: Growing American Craft. This exhibition was staged at the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum (August 22, 2025-September 7, 2026). In this interview, Kay reflects on the exhibition and associated catalogue, situating this collaborative project within his long-term work studying crafts, and working with craftspeople, associated with the Indiana State Fair. The following interview was undertaken by Jason Baird Jackson, with Jon Kay, between September 23 and October 5, 2024. It was initially published as follows: Kay, Jon, and Jason Baird Jackson. 2025. “‘State Fairs: Growing American Craft: Four Questions for Exhibition Contributing Curator Jon Kay.” Shreds and Patches (blog). October 8, 2025. https://jasonbairdjackson.com/2025/10/08/state-fairs-growing-american-craft-four-questions-for-exhibition-contributing-curator-jon-kay/ In order to make this interview durably available, it is being added to the Published Works and White Papers series of the Material Culture and Heritage Studies Laboratory of the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology, Indiana University. It is deposited in IUScholarWorks with the consent of the interviewee

    “A Culture Carried: Chin Basketry in Central Indiana”: Five Questions for Exhibition Curator Jon Kay

    No full text
    Working with IU Bloomington folklore studies doctoral student and MCHSL affiliate Touhidul Islam as co-curator and in partnership with colleagues, collaborators and tradition bearers in the Central Indiana Chin community, Jon Kay organized the exhibition “A Culture Carried: Chin Basketry in Central Indiana." It was presented at the Gayle Karch Cook Center at Indiana University Bloomington between August 26 and October 4, 2024. The following interview was undertaken by Jason Baird Jackson, with Jon Kay, between August 24 and 30, 2024. It was initially published as follows: Kay, Jon, and Jason Baird Jackson. 2024. “‘A Culture Carried: Chin Basketry in Central Indiana’: Five Questions for Exhibition Curator Jon Kay.” Shreds and Patches (blog). August 30, 2024. https://jasonbairdjackson.com/2024/08/30/a-culture-carried-chin-basketry-in-central-indiana-five-questions-for-exhibition-curator-jon-kay/. In order to make this interview durably available, it is being added to the Published Works and White Papers series of the Material Culture and Heritage Studies Laboratory of the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology, Indiana University. It is deposited in IUScholarWorks with the consent of the author.Indiana University Arts and Humanities Allen Whitehill Clowes Charitable Foundation Indiana Arts Commission National Endowment for the Arts Indiana University Institute for Advanced Studies Indiana University College Arts and Humanities Institute
    corecore