Social Sciences Division
Professor
Faculty
Latin American & Latino Studies
Critical Race and Ethnic Studies
Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas
Social Sciences 1
329
Social Sciences 1 Faculty Services
Mark Anderson is a cultural anthropologist specializing in race and ethnicity, transnationalism, the African diaspora, tourism, Latin America, and the history of anthropology. His most recent book is From Boas to Black Power: Racism, Liberalism, and American Anthropology, a history of U.S. cultural anthropological thought on race and racism from the 1920s to the early 1970s. His earlier book Black and Indigenous: Garifuna Activism and Consumer Culture in Honduras examines the politics of race and culture among the Garifuna in Honduras to explore the relationships between multiculturalism, consumption, and neoliberalism in the Americas. It demonstrates the mutual entanglements between indigeneity and blackness and between diasporic affiliations and nativist attachments, analyzing the overlapping, ambivalent and unstable modes of identification through people represent themselves and negotiate oppression. Mark Anderson received his PhD from the University of Texas at Austin and was a Harper postdoctoral fellow at the University of Chicago.
Racial formation, diaspora, nationalism, transnationalism, culture and power; Latin America, African diaspora
Race and Ethnicity; Capitalism, Consumption and Value; Latin America; The African Diaspora; Social and Cultural Theory; Transnationalism and Diaspora