The ethics of anthropology and Amerindian research
Contents
Ethical and political ramifications of the reporting/non-reporting of native American ritualized violence
Christopher W. Schmidt, Rachel A. Lockhart Sharkey
27-36
Pre-columbian warfare and indecorous images in southeastern North America
Charles R. Cobb, Dawnie Wolfe Steadman
37-50
The portrayal of native American violence and warfare
who speaks for the past?
David H. Dye, M. F. Keel
51-72
Sympathetic ethnocentrism, repression, and auto-repression of Q'eqchi' Maya blood sacrifice
Arthur A. Demarest, Brent Woodfill
117-145
Relativism, revisionism, aboriginalism, and emic/etic truth
the case study of Apocalypto
Richard D. Hansen
147-190
Overstating, downplaying, and denying indigenous conquest warfare in pre-hispanic empires of the andes
Dennis E. Ogburn
269-287
Violence, indigeneity, and archaeological interpretation in the central andes
Elizabeth Arkush
289-309
Conservation or resource maximization?
analyzing subsistence hunting among the aAchuar (Shiwiar) of Ecuador
Richard J. Chacon
311-360
Medical ramifications of failing to acknowledge Amerindian warfare, violence, social inequality, and cultural enigmas
John Walden
367-393
Ancestral pueblos and modern diatribes
an interview with Antonio Chavarria of Santa Clara Pueblo, curator of ethnology, museum of Indian arts and culture, Santa Fe, New Mexico
Antonio Chavarria, Rúben G. Mendoza
395-426