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Save the Date (September 30): McKenzie Alford Defense

Sep. 25, 2025 — The department is pleased to announce that on Tuesady, September 30, 2025, McKenzie Alford will defend her dissertation, “An Application of the Archaeology of the Human Experience to Classic Period Hohokam Burials at S’edav Va’aki, Phoenix, Arizona.” The event will be held at 12pm in Room 0120, James M. Collins Executive Education Center.

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Nine New Graduate Students: Welcoming the 2025 Cohort

Aug. 22, 2025 —The Department of Anthropology is thrilled to welcome its new cohort of graduate studentsthe largest in recent memory. These nine brilliant young scholars were chosen from a highly-competitive applicant pool and join a vibrant academic community at a critical juncture in the university’s history.

Three incoming students will join the department’s Archaeology program. Andrew Goebel, a graduate of Carthage College, plans to study human-animal relationships and the influence of animals on religion and folklore. Segun Moses Okegbile, who has completed degrees at the University of Ibadan, is interested in human-environment interactions and adaptation strategies in West Africa. Laura Wildman, an SMU alumna (and former Anthropology Club President!), returns to the department to study expressions of grief in the archaeological record, focusing on child burials.

The other six incoming students join the Cultural Anthropology program at SMU. Jackson Chappell, a graduate of the University of Utah, is interested in the relationship between politics, economics, and hierarchy in Norway. Jose M. Dominguez, joining us from California State University, Dominguez Hills, plans to study resilience and stress among child migrants. Madalyn White, who completed her BA at Texas State University, hopes to conduct research on small-scale farmers in Honduras.

Our final three Cultural Anthropology students will further specialize in Medical Anthropology. A.J. Nicholson, a graduate of California State Polytechnic University, plans to study how people navigate end-of-life care in North America. Michelle Zernick, who joins the department from California State University, Long Beach and the University of California, Irvine, is interested in early psychosis intervention and mental healthcare decision-making, particularly among d/Deaf people. Finally, Beiyi Zhang, who holds degrees from Huazhong University of Science and Technology and the Chinese University of Hong Kong, plans to conduct research on the lived experiences of youth with ADHD in contemporary China.

Please join us in welcoming the 2025 cohort to SMU!

 

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Save the Date (Apr 17): Nicolette Edwards Defense

Mar. 28, 2025 — The department is thrilled to announce that on April 17, 2025, graduate student Nicolette M. Edwards will defend her dissertation, “Investigating Women’s Provisioning Efforts in the Ethnoarchaeological Record of Central African Forest Foragers.” The event will be held from 1:00pm-4:00pm in Moody Hall’s Room 125. You can join on Zoom with Meeting ID 929 7813 9035 – Passcode 950220.

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Save the Date (Dec 5): Anne Parfitt Defense

Dec. 2, 2024 — The department is thrilled to announce that on December 5, 2024, graduate student Anne Parfitt will defend her dissertation, “Variability in Northeastern Early Paleoindian-Period Basecamps: Implications for the Peopling of New Landscapes.” The event will be held at 1:00pm in Annette Caldwell Simmons Room 213. You can join on Zoom with Meeting ID 993 7851 8802 – Passcode 270407.

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Save the Date (Oct 31): Abigail Fisher Defense

Oct. 1, 2024 — The department is thrilled to announce that on October 31, 2024, graduate student Abigail Fisher will defend her dissertation, “Dogs as Proxies for Forager-Farmer Interactions along the Missouri River, North and South Dakota.” The event will be held from 11:00am to 1:00pm in the Founder’s Room (Room 407) in Heroy Hall.

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Erik Schlicht Receives NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

Sept. 18, 2024 — Anthropology graduate student Erik Schlicht has been awarded the National Science Foundation’s Graduate Research Fellowship. The fellowship provides three years of funding for his coursework and dissertation on Indigenous uses of fire in managing the landscape of the Sierra Nevada.