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CURRICULUM VITAE ROBBIE FRANKLYN ETHRIDGE Department of Sociology and Anthropology University of Mississippi University, Mississippi 662-915-7317 rethridg@ olemiss.edu Present Position Professor of Anthropology, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS North American Editor, Ethnohistory, Duke University Press. Founding Editor, Native South, University of Nebraska Press. Areas of Specialization Historical Anthropology, Indians of the American South, Environmental Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology Education 1991-1996, Ph.D., Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. Dissertation title A Contest for Land: The Creek Indians on the Southern Frontier, 1796 - 1816; directed by Dr. Charles Hudson. GPA 4.0. 1981-1984, M.A., Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. Thesis title The Indians of Georgia: A Social History; directed by Dr. Charles Hudson. GPA 4.0 1974-1978, B.S., Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. Honor's Thesis title Toward the Sunland: Cherokee Medical Practices and Theories of Plant Selection; directed by Dr. Charles Hudson. Elected Phi Beta Kappa, 1978. GPA 4.0. Graduated Summa Cum Laude. Teaching and Research Experience Professor, 2010-present. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi Associate Professor, 2003 - 2010. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi Associate Professor, 2003-2008. Center for the Study of Southern Culture, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi Visiting Associate Professor, Spring 2006. Program in the Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

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Page 1: CURRICULUM VITAE ROBBIE FRANKLYN ETHRIDGEsocanth.olemiss.edu › wp-content › uploads › sites › 154 › 2017 › 02 › … · CURRICULUM VITAE ROBBIE FRANKLYN ETHRIDGE . Department

CURRICULUM VITAE ROBBIE FRANKLYN ETHRIDGE Department of Sociology and Anthropology University of Mississippi University, Mississippi 662-915-7317 rethridg@ olemiss.edu Present Position Professor of Anthropology, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS North American Editor, Ethnohistory, Duke University Press. Founding Editor, Native South, University of Nebraska Press. Areas of Specialization Historical Anthropology, Indians of the American South, Environmental Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology Education 1991-1996, Ph.D., Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. Dissertation title A Contest for Land: The Creek Indians on the Southern Frontier, 1796 - 1816; directed by Dr. Charles Hudson. GPA 4.0. 1981-1984, M.A., Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. Thesis title The Indians of Georgia: A Social History; directed by Dr. Charles Hudson. GPA 4.0 1974-1978, B.S., Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. Honor's Thesis title Toward the Sunland: Cherokee Medical Practices and Theories of Plant Selection; directed by Dr. Charles Hudson. Elected Phi Beta Kappa, 1978. GPA 4.0. Graduated Summa Cum Laude. Teaching and Research Experience Professor, 2010-present. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi Associate Professor, 2003 - 2010. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi Associate Professor, 2003-2008. Center for the Study of Southern Culture, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi Visiting Associate Professor, Spring 2006. Program in the Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

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Assistant Professor, 1997 - 2003. Department of Sociology and Anthropology and Center for the Study of Southern Culture, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi. Courses: Introduction to Anthropology (ANTH 101 and ANTH 102) Honor’s Introduction to Anthropology (ANTH 101, Section H) Cultural Anthropology

(ANTH 303) History of Anthropological Theory (ANTH 409) Methods in Ethnohistory (ANTH 506) The Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Southeastern

Indians (ANTH 333/610) Environmental Anthropology of the South (ANTH 319) Indians on the Southern Frontier

(ANTH 317) Indians and the Natural World (ENV 304, ANTH 331) The Rise and Fall of the Mississippian World (ANTH 316) The Leakey Family and Human Evolution (ANTH 311, Honor’s Seminar) Environmental Anthropology (ENV 256, ANTH 330) Indian Country Today (in preparation) Graduate Seminar in Cultural and Linguistic Anthropology (ANTH 606) Graduate Seminar

in Research Methods in Anthropology (ANTH 609) Introduction to Southern Studies (SST 101 and 102) Honor’s Introduction to Southern Studies (SST 101, Section H) Senior Seminar in Southern Studies, “Representations of the Southern Environment” (SST

401 and 402) Graduate Seminar in Southern Studies, “Framing the South: Comparing and Contrasting

The Cultural Paradigm and the Political Economy Paradigm” (SST 602) The Environmental and Social History of the Mississippi River (HON 420) Contract Ethnohistorian, 1994 - present. Subcontractor for documentary and archival research on Historic Indian Period sites and ethnohistory in the Southeastern United States. Instructor, Winter and Spring Quarters 1997, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia Athens, Georgia. Courses: Introduction to Anthropology (ANT 102) Graduate Teaching Assistant, 1991- 1996, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia. As a teaching assistant I was given full responsibility for course design, teaching, and grading. Received departmental ranking of third out of 14 ANT 102 instructors in 1995 and first out of 14 ANT 102 instructors in 1996. Courses: Introduction to Anthropology (ANT 102), Honor’s Introduction to Anthropology (ANT 212H) Assistant Editor, 1988 - 1991, Exploration Resources, Athens, GA. Evaluated data and edited yearly environmental ground-water monitoring reports for the Savannah River Site. Ran ground-water monitoring and geological data computer programs for environmental studies. Ethnohistorian, 1985-1988, Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia. Researched historical documentation on the Southeastern Indians and authored or co-authored results in various reports.

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Graduate Assistant, 1982-1983, Introduction to Anthropology (ANT 102), Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia. Lecture course with approximately 100 students; full responsibility for course design, teaching, and grading. Adult Education Reading Instructor, 1978, Rough Rock Demonstration School, Navajo Indian Reservation, Rough Rock, Arizona. Instructor of English reading classes for adult Navajo; full responsibility for course design, teaching, and grading. Journal and Book Series Editorial Experience North American Editor, Ethnohistory, flagship peer-reviewed journal published by Duke University Press for the American Society for Ethnohistory, 2013-2018. Associate Editor, Ethnohistory, flagship peer-reviewed journal published by Duke University Press for the American Society for Ethnohistory, 2012-2013. Editorial Board, Mississippi Archeology, 2015-2017. Editorial Board, Environmental History and the American South Series, University of Georgia Press, 2007-present. Executive Editor, Native South. Peer-reviewed journal published yearly by the University of Nebraska Press, 2010-2012. Editor, 2007-2012, Native South. Peer-reviewed journal published yearly by the University of Nebraska Press. Founding Editor, Native South. University of Nebraska Press, 2007-present. Professional Experience Chair, Task Force on Sexual Harassment and Sexual Assault, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 2016-2017. Chair, Native American and Indigenous Studies W orking Group, University of Mississippi, 2015-present. Graduate Coordinator, Department of Anthropology, University of Mississippi, 2015-present. Committee Member and Chair, Mooney Book Award, Southern Anthropological Society, 2007-2015. Outside evaluator, W estern Carolina University, Department of Anthropology, April 2-4, 2014. Chair, Patti Jo Watson Award, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 2014. Consultant, film project “Common Table: People, Place, and Food in the American South,” produced by Jamie S. Ross, Agee Films, Charlottesville, VA, 2014-present. Chair, Local Arrangements Committee for the 2013 Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, September 11-14, 2013, New Orleans, LA. President, Southern Anthropological Society, 2012-2014. Chair, Robert F. Heizer Article Award Committee, American Society for Ethnohistory, 2011. Graduate Council Committee, 2011-2012. Sabbatical Leave Review Committee 2011-2012.

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College of Liberal Arts Tenure and Promotion Committee, 2010-2012. Committee Member, Helen Hornbeck Tanner Award, American Society for Ethnohistory, 2010. Executive Officer, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 2010-2012. Council Member, American Society for Ethnohistory, 2009-2011. Chair, Local Arrangements Committee for the 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Sept. 30-Oct. 4, New Orleans, LA. Outside Reviewer, Omohundro Institute for Early American History and Culture, National Endowment of the Humanities Post-Doctoral Fellowship, 2009. Local arrangements chair, Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, Oxford, Mississippi, February 15-18, 2007. Committee Member, Erminie Wheeler-Voegelin Book Award, American Society for Ethnohistory, 2006. Co-Program Chair, 59th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 6-10, Biloxi, Mississippi, 2002. Organizer, Porter L. Fortune, Jr., History Symposium, “The Early Social History of The Southeastern Indians, 1527-1715,” University of Mississippi, October,1998. Faculty Advisor, Program Committee for President’s Initiative on Race, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi, January 1998-March 1998 President, Beta of Mississippi Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, 2003-2004, 2006-2007. Nominations Committee, American Society for Ethnohistory, 2006-2007. Vice President, Beta of Mississippi Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, 2001-2003. Senator, Liberal Arts III, Faculty Senate, University of Mississippi, 1997-2001, Co-organizer, Colloquia on the Southern Environment, University of Mississippi, 2000, 2001. Faculty Advisor, Society for Student Anthropologists, University of Mississippi, 1999-present. Honors William and Mary Quarterly and Early Modern Studies Institute Workshop, “Before 1607,” 2013. Mooney Award for 2011, Southern Anthropological Society, for monograph “From Chicaza to Chickasaw: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Mississippian World, 1540-1715” (UNC Press, 2010) Award of Merit, American Association of State and Local History, Old Federal Road Project, 2010 Amerind Foundation Seminar Award, 2009 Society for American Archaeology Outstanding Session Award, 2009 Scholar of the Year Award, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, 2001 Robert C. Anderson Award, University of Georgia, 1999

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University-wide Fellowship, Master's Program, University of Georgia, 1981 Summa Cum Laude, University of Georgia, Undergraduate Program, 1978 Elected Phi Beta Kappa, 1977 External Grants, Fellowships, and Contracts Georgia Department of Transportation, Federal Road Project, Phase II, Atlanta, GA 2005-2006, $54,000. Mellon Sabbatical Fellowship, American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, PA, 2004-2005, $32,000. National Endowment for the Humanities, “The Chickasaws,” with Jay Johnson and John O’Hear, 2000, $75,000. American Philosophical Society Phillips Fund for Native American Studies, 1993, 1994, $3,000/year. Ethnohistory Project,1994, $2,000. Coosawattee Foundation, Inc., Grant for Research on Southeastern Indians, 1993, $500. Delta Kappa Gamma Society, Grant-in-Aid, 1993, $500. Internal Grants and Fellowships Office of Research and Sponsored Programs, University of Mississippi, 2009, $1500 Office of Research and Sponsored Programs, University of Mississippi, 2008, $1500 Faculty Research Fellow, Office of Research and Sponsored Programs, University of Mississippi, 2004, $8,000 Faculty Research Fellow, Office of Research and Sponsored Programs, University of Mississippi, 2003, $8,000 Liberal Arts Faculty Development Fund, University of Mississippi, 2001, 2002, $5,000/year. University of Mississippi Summer Support Program 1999, 2000, $5,000/year.

Publications - Books The Rise and Fall of the Mississippian World. In preparation. The Historical Turn in American Archaeology, co-edited with Eric Bowne. Athens: University of Georgia Press, proposal to be submitted August 2017. From Chicaza to Chickasaw: The European Invasion and the Transformation of a Southern Indian Society. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2010. Mapping the Mississippian Shatter Zone: The Colonial Indian Slave Trade and Regional Instability in the American South, co-edited with Sheri M. Shuck-Hall. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2009.

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Light on the Path: The Anthropology and History of the Southeastern Indians, co-edited with Thomas J. Pluckhahn. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2006. Creek Country: The Creek Indians and Their World, 1796-1816. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2003. The Transformation of the Southeastern Indians, 1540-1760, co-edited with Charles Hudson. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2002. Publications - Chapters in Books The Historical Turn in American Archaeology. In The Historical Turn in American Archaeology, edited by Robbie Ethridge and Eric Bowne. Athens: University of Georgia Press, book proposal to be submitted August 2017, chapter in preparation. Knights of Spain, Twenty Years Later. Foreword to 20th Anniversary Edition of Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun: Hernando de Soto and the South’s Ancient Chiefdoms, by Charles Hudson. Athens: University of Georgia Press, in press. The Ancient South to 1600. In A History of the American South, edited by Fitzhugh W . Brundage. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, in preparation. The Wild and the Tame: Sam Fathers as Ecological Indian. In Faulkner and the Native South, edited by Jay Watson and Annette Trezfer. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, in press. The Native World before New Orleans. In New Orleans: The Founding Era. New Orleans, LA: This Historic New Orleans Collection, in press. The Rise and Fall of the Mississippian Chiefdoms. In Oxford Research Encyclopedias in History, edited by Colin Calloway. New York: Oxford University Press, in press. The Southeast. Co-authored with Jessica Blanchard and Mary Linn. In Handbook of North American Indians, volume 1, edited by Igor Krupnik. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, in press. Communication Networks in the Mississippian World at the Time of Soto. In Forging Southeastern Identities: Social Archaeology of the Mississippian to Early Historic South, edited by Gregory A. Waselkov and Marvin T. Smith. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2017. European Invasions and Early Settlement, 1500-1680. In The Oxford Handbook of American Indian History, edited by Frederick Hoxie. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016. Afterward. In Multiscalar Archaeological Perspectives of the Southern Appalachians, edited by Ramie Gougeon and Maureen Meyers, University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, 2015. Global Capital, Violence, and the Making of Colonial Shatter Zones. In Colonial Genocide and Indigenous North America: A Workshop, edited by Andrew Woolford, Alexander Hinton, and Jeff Benvenuto, pp. 49- 60, Duke University Press, 2014. The Colonial Invasion and the Transformation of the Indians of Tennessee, 1540-1715. In Before the Volunteer State: New Thoughts on Early Tenneessee History, 1690-1800, edited by Kristofer Ray. University of Tennessee Press, 2014.

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Economic Strategies: Native North America. In The Princeton Companion to Atlantic History, edited by Joseph Miller. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2014. Contact Era Studies and the Southeastern Indians. In Native and Spanish New Worlds: Sixteenth-Century Entradas in the American Southwest and Southeast, edited by Clay Mathers and Charles M. Haecker. Tuscson: University of Arizona Press, 2013. The Interior South at the Time of Spanish Exploration, co-authored with Jeffrey Mitchem. In Native and Spanish New Worlds: Sixteenth-Century Entradas in the American Southwest and Southeast, edited by Clay Mathers and Charles M. Haecker. Tuscson: University of Arizona Press, 2013. A Brief Sketch of Creek Country during the Life of W illiam W eatherford. In The Case of Weatherford vs. Weatherford, edited by J. Anthony Paredes. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2012. Early Capitalist Inauguration and the Formation of a Colonial Shatter Zone. In Routledge Handbook of World-Systems Analysis, edited by Salvatore Babones, 295-303, Oxford, England, Routledge Press, 2012. The Emergence of the Colonial South: Colonial Indian Slaving, the Fall of the Pre-Contact Mississippian World and the Emergence of a New Social Geography in the American South, 1540-1715. In Adoption, Captivity, and Slavery: Exploring the Social and Economic Status of the Exchange of People in Native American Communities, edited by Max Carrocci and Stephanie Pratt. London: Palgrave Publishers, 2011. Cross-Cultural Actors. In American Centuries: the Ideas, Issues, and Trends that Made U.S. History, Vol. 1, edited by Karen Ordahl Kupperman. New York: MTM Publishing, Inc., 2011. The Making of a Militaristic Slaving Society: The Chickasaws and the Colonial Indian Slave Trade. In The Indian Slave Trade in Colonial America, edited by Alan Gallay, 251-276, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2009. Mapping the Mississippian Shatter Zone, An Introduction. In Mapping the Mississippian Shatter Zone: The Colonial Indian Slave Trade and Regional Instability, edited by Robbie Ethridge and Sheri Shuck-Hall, 1-62. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2009. A Comparative Analysis of the De Soto Accounts on the Route to and Events at Mabila. Co-authored with Kathryn Braund, Lawrence Clayton, George Lankford, and Michael Murray, In The Search for Mabila, edited by Vernon James Knight, Jr., 153-181. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2009. Introduction. Co-authored with Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Jerald Milanich, and Marvin Smith. In Light on the Path: The Anthropology and History of the Southeastern Indians, edited Thomas J. Pluckhahn and Robbie Ethridge. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2006. Creating the Shatter Zone: Indian Slave Traders and the Collapse of the Southeastern Chiefdoms. In Light on the Path: The Anthropology and History of the Southeastern Indians, edited Thomas J. Pluckhahn and Robbie Ethridge. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2006. The Creek Indians and Americans in the Age of W ashington. In George Washington and Conceptions of the Late Eighteenth-Century South, edited by Greg O’Brien and Tamara Harvey. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2004. The Early Historic Transformation of the Southeastern Indians. Co-authored with Charles Hudson. In Cultural Diversity in the U. S. South: Anthropological Contributions to a Region in Transition, Carole E.

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Hill and Patricia D. Beaver, eds., pp. 34 - 50. Southern Anthropological Society Proceedings, No. 31. Athens: University of Georgia, 1998. The Southeast. In Native Americans: Arts and Crafts, Colin F. Taylor, editorial consultant, pp. 12-21. London: Salamander Books Limited, 1995. Publications - Referred Journal Articles Twenty-five years after Knights of Spain: The Influence of Charles Hudson on Southeastern Indian Studies (working title), co-authored with Eric Bowne, in progress. The Ancient South and Southern History, in progress. Comments on “An Ethnohistorian’s Viewpoint,” by Erminie W heeler Voegelin, Ethnohistory 1(1):166-171, 1954. Ethnohistory, submitted. Reflections on the Long Nineteenth Century and Indian Removal. Journal of American Nineteenth-Century History, 17(2):241-245, 2016. A Line in the Sand: Editor’s Introduction to Native South. Native South, 1:ix-xvi, 2008. Measuring Chickasaw Adaptation on the W estern Frontier of the Colonial South: A Correlation of Documentary and Archaeological Data. Co-authored with Jay K. Johnson, John W . O’Hear, Brad R. Lieb, Susan L. Scott, and H. Edwin Jackson. Southeastern Archaeology, 27(1):1-30, 2008. On Interpreting Cofitechequi. Co-authored with Charles Hudson, Robin Beck, Chester DePratter, and John W orth. Ethnohistory, 55(3):465-490, 2008. Bearing Witness: Assumptions, Realities, and the Otherizing of Katrina. American Anthropologist, 4(108): 799-813, 2006. The Evolution of Human Ecological Systems During the Period of European Colonization and Mercantile Expansion - A Preliminary Assessment. Georgia Journal of Ecological Anthropology, Vol. 2, No. 1, Spring 1998. Flintlocks and Slavecatchers: Economic Transformations of the Georgia Indians. Early Georgia 10:13-26, 1984. Button-snakeroot: Symbolism among the Southeastern Indians. Tennessee Anthropologist 4(2):160-166, 1979. Tobacco Among the Cherokee. Journal of Cherokee Studies 3(2):76-86, 1978. Invited Lectures/Workshops and Keynote Addresses Invited Participant. “Student Workshop on Publishing,” Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, October 6-29, 2016. Keynote address, “Mr. Faulkner’s Indians: A Brief History of the Indians of Mississippi,”presented at the University of Mississippi Faulkner & Yoknapatawpha Conference, Oxford, MS, July 17-21, 2016.

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Invited Lecture, “When Giants Walked the Earth: Chief Tascaluza and Leadership in the Ancient South,” presented at the Department of History, Race Ethnicity and Nation lecture series, The Ohio State University, April 15, 2016. Invited Lecture, “When Giants Walked the Earth: Chief Tascaluza and Leadership in the Ancient South,” presented at Native American Heritage Month, Department of Social Sciences, Delta State University, Cleveland, MS, November 19, 2014. Invited Lecture, “When Giants Walked the Earth: Chief Tascaluza and Leadership in the Ancient South,” presented at the Michael Green Lecture Series, Department of American Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, November 6, 2014. Invited Participant and Co-organizer, “The Ancient South and Southern History,” presented at symposium, “Indians as Southerners, Southerners as Indians: Rethinking the History of a Region,” Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida. Symposium co-organized with Andrew Frank and Kristofer Ray, September, 2014. Invited Participant. “Student W orkshop on Publishing,” Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 6-10, 2013, Tampa, Florida. Invited Participant. “The Indian Slave Trade in the American South and the Fall of the Mississippian W orld,” Presented at Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition 15th Annual International Conference, Yale University, November 15-16, 2013, New Haven, Connecticut. Invited Participant. “The Native South Before 1607.” Presented at W illiam and Mary Quarterly, Early Modern Studies Institute W orkshop, “Before 1607,” May 24-25, 2013, Huntington Library, Pasadena, California. Invited Participant. “Florida as a Safety Valve for the Southeast and the Backcountry.” Presented at the symposium “Early Florida: The Missing Piece,” March 15-16, 2013, John Carter Brown Library, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. Invited Participant. “Global Capital, Violence, and the Making of Colonial Shatter Zones.” Presented at “Colonial Genocide and Indigenous North America: A Workshop,” January 23-24, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Keynote Address, “The Contours of Contact: A Continental North America Perspective.” Presented at the Collaborative Archaeology Workshop, “Theories of the Past: The Role of History in Archaeology,” March 23-24, 2012, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Invited Participant, “Indian Country in 1812: the Life and Times of the Southern Indians on the Eve of the W ar of 1812.” Presented at the symposium “The Beginning: the W ar of 1812, the Atlantic World, and Tennessee,” March 17, 2012, Nashville, Tennessee. Invited Discussant. Southern History Intellectual Circle, comments on panel, “Native American Passages,” with Keith Cartwright, Jace Weaver, Angela Pulley Hudson, at the College of W illiam and Mary, February 23-26, 2012, Williamsburg, Virginia. Invited Participant, “The Seventeenth-Century Indian Slave Trade and the Emergence of the Colonial South.” Presented at the symposium, “Colonial and Post-Colonial Ceramics of the Mississippi Delta,” National Park Service, November 10-12, 2011, Natchez, Mississippi.

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Invited Lecture, "Colonial Indian Slaving in the Hinterlands–the Case of the Chickasaws." Presented at Rice University Fourth Biennial Symposium on Southern History, "Slavery in the Colonial South," February 18- 20, 2011, Houston, Texas. Invited Lecture, “Southern Indian History During the Early Colonial Period.” Presented at the Euchee Heritage Festival, Sapulpa, Oklahoma, October 8, 2010. Invited Lecture, "The Heart of Creek Country." Presented at the Euchee Heritage Festival, Sapulpa, Oklahoma, October 8, 2010. Invited Lecture, "The Heart of Creek Country." Presented at the Department of Biology Symposium, University of Mississippi, September 24, 2010, Oxford, Mississippi. Invited Lecture, "Movements of Native Nations in the Lower Mississippi Valley during the Early Colonial Era.." Presented at "Roots and Branches: Migrations to the Lower Ohio and Mississippi Valley, Center for Delta Studies, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, March 4-6, 2010. Invited Lecture, “Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Southeastern Indians.” Seminar on Politics, Society, the Environment, and Development, Barnard College, Columbia University, April 24, 2008, New York, NY. Invited Lecture, “Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Southeastern Indians.” Center for Historic Research, The Ohio State University, April 18, 2008, Columbus, OH. Invited Paper, “Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Southeastern Indians.” Presented at symposium entitled “Adoption, Captivity, and Slavery: Changing Meaning in Early Colonial America,” British Museum, February 17-18, 2008, London, England. Invited Participant, Colloquium entitled “Indians, Labor and the Culture of Capitalism: A Colloquium of Historians, Ethnohistorians, and Anthropologists,” The Newberry Library, Chicago, Illinois, September 22- 23, 2006. Invited Participant, The Search for Mabila: A Three-Day Multidisciplinary Workshop. University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, September 27-30, 2006. Featured Speaker, Mapping the Shatter Zone, “Transitions to Modernity” W orkshop, Department of History, Yale University, March 21, 2006. Invited Speaker, Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Mississippian W orld, at the symposium “Revised Lives: Early Transformations of the Southeastern Indians,” Institute of Native American Studies, University of Georgia, Athens, February 3, 2006. Invited Lecture, “Revised Lives: Early Transformations of the Southeastern Indians,” Institute of Native American Studies, University of Georgia, Athens, February 3, 2006. Invited Lecture, The Heart of Creek Country. Goldring Family Distinguished Visiting Lecture, Program in the Environment, University of Michigan, November 14, 2005. Invited Participant, Inter-disciplinary W orking Group on the Global South. Sponsored by the University of Mississippi Office of Research and Sponsored Programs, 2005-2007.

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Instructional Resource Person, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Lecture and departmental colloquium, “The Late Eighteenth-Century Creek Indians and Their Environment,” March 26, 1996. Historical Consultant and Interviewee, “Georgia Stories, No. 5," Georgia Public Television, Produced by Roger Torda, Dye Star TV, Atlanta, GA, September, 1995. Publications - Encyclopedia Entries The Plan of Civilization. Encyclopedia of Alabama, an online encyclopedia sponsored by the University of Alabama, 2007. Benjamin Hawkins. In The New Georgia Encyclopedia, an online encyclopedia sponsored by the Georgia Humanities Council, The University of Georgia Press, and Galileo, Athens, GA, 2006. The Paleo Period. Co-authored with Victor Thomas and Maureen Meyers. In The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, Volume 3. History, Charles Reagan W ilson, volume and series editor. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. The Archaic Period. Co-authored with Victor Thomas and Maureen Meyers. In The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, Volume 3. History, Charles Reagan W ilson, volume and series editor Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. The W oodland Period. Co-authored with Maureen Meyers. In The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, Volume 3. History, Charles Reagan W ilson, volume and series editor Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. The Mississippian Period. Co-authored with Maureen Meyers. In The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, Volume 3. History, Charles Reagan W ilson, volume and series editor. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. The Contact Era. In The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, Volume 1. History. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. The Early English Trade and the Formation of the Creeks and Cherokees. In The New Georgia Encyclopedia. An online encyclopedia for The Georgia Humanities Council, The University of Georgia Press, and Galileo, Athens, GA, 2004. Publications - Book Reviews Engines of Diplomacy: Indian Trading Factories and the Negotiation of American Empire by David Andrew Nichols. Reviewed for Early Georgia, in preparation. Constructing Histories: Archaic Freshwater Shell Mounds and Social Landscapes of the St. Johns River, Florida, by Asa R. Randall. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. Reviewed for Southeastern Archaeology, submitted. The Powhatan Landscape: An Archeological History of the Algonquian Chesapeake, by Martin D. Gallivan. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. Reviewed for the William and Mary Quarterly, 3d ser., 74(2):172-175, 2017.

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Roots of Our Renewal: Ethnobotany and Cherokee Environmental Governance, by Clint Carroll. Reviewed for the American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 40(1):227-229, 2016. The Four Deaths of Acorn Whistler: Telling Stories in Colonial America, by Joshua Piker. Reviewed for The Journal of Southern History, 81(3): 698-699, August 2015. An Empire of Small Places: Mapping the Southeastern Anglo-Indian Trade, 1732-1795, by Robert Paulett. Reviewed for the Journal of American Studies, 49:194-95, 2015. Recognition Odyssey: Indigeneity, Race, and Federal Tribal Recognition Policy in Three Louisiana Indian Communities by Brian Klopotek. Reviewed for H-Law Book Review, July 2014 (online). Remaining Chickasaw in Indian Territory, 1830s-1907 by W endy St. Jean. Reviewed for the Journal of Anthropological Research, 69(2):272-273, 2013. Bonds of Alliance: Indigenous and Atlantic Slaveries in New France by Brett Rushforth. Reviewed for the American Historical Review, 118:1139-41, 2013. The Second Creek War: Interethnic Conflict and Collusion on a Collapsing Frontier by John T. Ellisor. Reviewed for Georgia Historical Quarterly, 96(1): 171-73, 2012.. Colonial Georgia and the Creeks: Anglo-Indian Diplomacy on the Soutehrn Frontier, 1733-1763 by John T. Juricek. Reviewed for the American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 36(2), 2012. Spirits of the Air: Birds and American Indians in the South by Shepard Krech, III. Reviewed for The Geographical Review, 100(2):228-80, April 2010 Journey to the West: The Alabama and Coushatta Indians by Sheri Marie Shuck-Hall. Reviewed for Wicazo Sa Review, 25(2):142-44, Fall 2010. Households and Hegemony: Early Creek Prestige Goods, Symbolic Capital, and Social Power by Cameron B. Wesson. Reviewed for American Ethnologist Book Review, 38(1):195-97, February 2011. Nature and History in the Potomac Country: From Hunter-Gatherers to the Age of Jefferson by James D. Rice. Reviewed for Reviews in History (http://www.history.ac.uk/reviews), July, 2010. Book forum on Timothy R. Pauketat’s Chiefdoms and Other Archaeological Delusions. Co-edited with David Anderson. Native South, 2: 69-73, 2009. Exiles and Pioneers: Eastern Indians in the Trans-Mississippi West by John P. Bowes. Reviewed Western Historical Quarterly, 40(3): 389-90, 2009. African Creeks: Estelvste and the Creek Nation by Gary Zellar. Reviewed for the Great Plains Quarterly, 29(3):242-43, 2009. Native American Landscapes of St. Catherines Island, Georgia (3 vols.) by David Hurst Thomas. Reviewed for Ethnohistory, 56 (3):536-537, 2009. The Natchez Indians: A History to 1735, by James F. Barnett, Jr. Reviewed for the Journal of American History, 95 (4):1126-1127, 2009.

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Review essay of Archaeology of the Moundville Chiefdom, edited by Vernon James Knight, Jr., and Vincas P. Steponaitis, New Edition, and Archaeology of the Lower Muskogee Creek Indians, 1715-1836, by H. Thomas Foster II, with contributions by Mary Theresa Bonhage-Freund and Lisa O’Steen. Reviewed for Alabama Review, 61(3):229-233, 2008. Yuchi Ceremonial Life: Performance, Meaning, and Tradition in a Contemporary American Indian Community by Jason Baird Jackson. Reviewed for Royal Anthropological Institute, 40(2):458-459, 2008. A Conquering Spirit: Fort Mims and the Redstick War of 1813-1814, by Gregory A. W aselkov. Reviewed for Ethnohistory, 55(1):180-181, 2008. McGillivray of the Creeks, by John W alton Caughey, and with a New Introduction by W illiam J. Bauer, Jr. Reviewed for H-NET BOOK REVIEW , published by H-List@ h-net.msu.edu, December 2007. The American South in a Global World, edited by James L. Peacock, Harry L. W atson, and Carrie R. Matthews. Reviewed for American Anthropologist, 108(3):608-609, 2006. Okfuskee: A Creek Indian Town in Colonial America by Joshua Piker. Reviewed for The American Historical Review, 3(2):472-473, 2006. The Westo Indians: Slave Traders of the Early Colonial South, by Eric Bowne. Reviewed for the Historical Archaeology, 40 (4): 140-141, 2006. The Invention of the Creek Nation, 1670-1763, by Steven C. Hahn. Reviewed for the Journal of American History, 92(2):584-585, 2005. The Collected Works of Benjamin Hawkins, 1796-1810, edited by H. Thomas Foster, II. Reviewed for Journal of the Early Republic, 25 (1):127-130, 2005. Early Art of the Southeastern Indians: Feathered Serpents and Winged Beings, by Susan C. Power. Reviewed for The Alabama Review, 58 (2): 149-151, 2005. Conversations with the High Priest of Coosa, by Charles M. Hudson. Reviewed for American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 27 (4): 148-150, 2004. The Archaeology and History of Georgia’s Native Tribes, by Max E. W hite. Reviewed for American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Volume 27 (3): 99-101, 2003. Cherokee Women: Gender and Culture Change, 1700-1835, by Theda Perdue. Reviewed for Mississippi Archaeology, 35 (2):276-280, 2000. Knights of Spain, Warriors of the Sun: Hernando de Soto and the South’s Ancient Chiefdoms, by Charles Hudson. Reviewed for The Southern Register, Oxford, Mississippi, W inter 1998, pp. 12-13. William Bartram on the Southeastern Indians, edited and annotated by Gregory A. W aselkov and Kathryn Holland Braund. Reviewed for American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Los Angeles, California, 20 (2):257-261, 1996. Iroquois Medical Botany, by James Herrick. Reviewed for American Indian Culture and Research Journal, Los Angeles, California, 20 (2 : 213-216, 1996.

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Lost Cities of the Ancient Southeast, by Mallory McCane. Reviewed for Gulf Coast Historical Review, Auburn, Alabama, . 13 (1):19-21, 1997. Technical Reports Phase II: Development of a A Technical Context for the Federal Road in North Georgia, Department of Transportation Project No. 05-07. Co-authored with Mathew Reynolds, Erin Stevens, Bryan Haley, and Jay Johnson. Georgia Submitted to Georgia Department of Transportation,.State of Georgia, No. 2 Capitol Square, SW , Atlanta, Georgia 30334, . Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Mississippi, University, Mississippi 38677, October 1, 2006. Awarded the Award of Merit from the American Association of State and Local History, 2010 Historical Research and Documentation Supporting Cultural Landscape and Historic Structures Reports for the Chieftains Museum/Major Ridge Home. Authored by Daniel T. Elliott, Karen G. W ood, Rita Folse Elliott, and Tracy M. Dean, with contributions by Robbie F. Ethridge. Submitted to Chieftains Museum/Major Ridge Home. Southern Research, Ellerslie, Georgia, November 2004. The Chickasaws: Economics, Politics, and Social Organization in the Early 18th Century. Final Report, National Endowment for the Humanities Grant No. RZ-20620-00. Co-authored with Jay K. Johnson, John W . O’Hear, Brad Lieb, Susan L. Scott, H. Edwin Jackson, Keith Jacobi, and Donna Courney Rausch. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Mississippi, Oxford, 2004. An Intensive Cultural Resources Survey of the Proposed Mill Creek W astewater Treatment Facility, Americus, Georgia. Co-authored with W . Dean Wood and T. Jeffrey Price. Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia, 1988. Prepared for the City of Americus. A Brief History of the Hunt Close Property, Meriwether County, Georgia, 1827-1987. Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia, 1987. Prepared for Hunt Close Associates, Ltd., Atlanta. A Cultural Resources Survey of the Lost Mountain Transmission Line and Due W est Substation. Co- authored with W . Dean W ood and Chad O. Braley. Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia, 1986. Prepared for Oglethorpe Power Corporation. Cultural Resources Survey of Allatoona Lake Area. Co-authored with R. Jerald Ledbetter, W . Dean W ood, and Chad O. Braley. Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia, 1986. Prepared for U.S. Army Engineer District, Mobile. Archeological Survey of the King Farm, Coweta County, Georgia. Co-authored with Tom H. Gresham. Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia, 1986. Prepared for Mr. Kim King. Papers Presented/Roundtables Who Knew What, and When: Information Flows through the Sixteenth-Century Mississippian World. To be presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Tulsa, OK, November 8-12, 2017. The Historical Turn in American Archaeology. To be presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Tulsa, OK, November 8-12, 2017.

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Archaeological and Ethnohistoric Evidence of the Mississippian Polity of Lamar. Co-authored with Maureen Meyers. Paper presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Athens, GA, October 27- October 29, 2016. Chief Tascaluza and Emperor Brims: Change and Continuity in Native Leadership Patterns from the Ancient South into the Colonial South. Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory, Nashville, TN, November 9-13, 2016. W arfare in the Ancient South: The Military Engagements between the Armies of the Ancient South and Hernando de Soto’s Army. Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory, Nashville, TN, November 9-13, 2016. The Wild and the Tame: Sam Fathers as Ecological Indian. Paper presented at the University of Mississippi Faulkner & Yoknapatawpha Conference, Oxford, MS, July 17-21, 2016. Rivers as Corridors of Communication, Transportation, and Movement during the Late Mississippian. Paper presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 18-21, 2015, Nashville, Tennessee. History Meets Archaeology in Indigenous/Colonial North America. American Historical Association Annual Meeting, January 2-5, 2015, New York, NY. Charlie’s Charge: W riting a Social History of the Native South. Presented at the roundtable “Charles Hudson and the Ethnohistory of the Native South: A Roundtable Discussion,”American Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting, October 8-12, 2014, Indianapolis, IN. Comments on “An Ethnohistorian’s Viewpoint,” by Erminie W heeler Voegelin, Ethnohistory 1(1):166-171, 1954. Presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting, October 8-12, 2014 Indianapolis, IN. What Good has Ethnohistory Done? Reflections for “Roots, Relevance, and Renewal: The American Society for Ethnohistory at 60.” Roundtable at the American Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting, October 8-12, 2014, Indianapolis, IN Florida and the Early Colonial Interior South: An Uneasy Relationship. Presented at the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, January 2-5, 2014, W ashington, DC. When Things Fall Apart: An Examination of the Migration Patterns after the Collapse of the Pre-Contact Mississippian W orld, 1540-1700. Presented at the American Anthropological Society Meetings, November 20-24, 2013, Chicago, Illinois. Roundtable discussion. Symposium “The Colonial Southeast: Middle Ground, Borderland, Shatter Zone, W hat?” Organization of American Historians, April 10-14, 2013, San Francisco, California. Rethinking the Introduction of Diseases into the Southeast. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, March 7-10, 2013, Johnson City, Tennessee.

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Linking History and Prehistory or Trying to Stitch Silk to Tinfoil? Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory, November 7-11, 2012, Springfield, Missouri. The Rise and Fall of Late Mississippian Chiefdoms in the Mississippi River Valley. Paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology, April 18-22, 2012, Memphis, Tennessee. The Rise and Fall of the Mississippian W orld: A First Look at Historicizing Prehistory. Paper presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 2-6, 2011, Jacksonville, Florida. A French Middle Ground in the Colonial South?: The Colonial Indian Slave Trade, the Petites Nations, and the Forging of a Life Together. Paper presented at the Southern Historical Association, October 27-20, 2011, Baltimore, MD. Colonial Indian Slave Trade and the Coalescences of Eighteenth-Century Southeastern Nations. Paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology, March 30-April 3, 2011, Sacramento, California. The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Mississippian W orld. Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association, November 17-21, 2010, New Orleans, Louisiana. The Seventeenth-Century Indian Slave Trade and the Emergence of the Colonial South. Paper presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, October 27-31, 2010, Lexington, Kentucky. Colonial Indian Slaving in the Hinterlands–the Case of the Chickasaws. Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory, October 13-17, 2010, Ottawa, Canada. A New Synthesis on the Origin of the Creeks. Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory, October 31-September 4, 2009, New Orleans, Louisiana. Contact Era Studies and the Southern Indians: A Historiography. Paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology, April 22-25, 2009, Atlanta, Georgia. The New South: The Fall of the Pre-Contact Mississippian W orld and the Emergence of a New Social Geography in the American South, 1540-1730. Paper presented at the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, New York, NY, January 2-5, 2008. The W ild and the Tame: Sam Fathers as Ecological Indian. Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting, November 7-11, 2007, Tulsa, OK From Chicaza to Chickasaw: The Early Colonial Slave Trade and the Transformation of a Mississippian Chiefdom. Paper presented at the Southern Historical Association Annual Meeting, October 31-November 4, 2007, Richmond, VA. Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Southeastern Indians. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Organization of American Historians, Organized Session “Indian Slavery in

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Colonial America” sponsored by the Omohundro Institute for Early American History and Culture, Minneapolis, MN, March 29-April 1, 2007. Re-Evaluating the Collapse of the Protohistoric Mississippian W orld. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Environmental History, Baton Rouge, LA, February 28-March 4, 2007. A Macro Regional Approach to Solving the Problem of Chicaza. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Little Rock, AR, November 9-13, 2006 The Contact Era and the Transformation of the Southeastern Indians: Bridging Prehistory and History. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, W illiamsburg, VA, November 1-5, 2006. The Tame and the Wild: Sam Fathers as Ecological Indian, invited paper presented at Native American Literature: Nationalism and Beyond Conference, University of Georgia, Institute for Native American Studies, Athens, Georgia, April 21-22, 2006. Mapping the Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Mississippian W orld, invited paper presented at the Transitions to Modernity Colloquium, Department of History, Yale University, March 20, 2006. Shatter Zone: The European Invasion and the Transformation of the Mississippian W orld, invited paper presented at “Revised Lives: Early Transformations of the Southeastern Indians,” Institute of Native American Studies, University of Georgia, Athens, February 3, 2006. Mapping the Shatter Zone: The Colonial Indian Slave Trade and Regional Instability. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 16-20, 2005. The Demography of Commercial Slaving: Reconsidering the Early Historic Population Collapse in the Southeast. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Columbia, South Carolina, November 2-5, 2005 Prehistory into History: New Questions in Southeastern Indian Ethnohistory. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Organization of American Historians, invited session entitled “State of the Field: Ethnohistory of North American Regions,” San Jose, California, March 30-April 3, 2005. A Militaristic Slaving Society: The Transformation of the Chickasaws after Contact. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Historical Association, Memphis, Tennessee, November 3-6, 2004. The Contact Era in the Southeast: W here “Prehistory” Meets “History.” Paper presented at Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Chicago, October 27-31, 2004. The Origins of Chickasaw Factionalism. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, .March 31-April 4, 2004 Shatter Zone: The Early Colonial Slave Trade and Its Consequences for the Natives of the Eastern W oodland. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Riverside, California, November 5-9, 2003. Shatter Zone: Early Colonial Slave Trading and Its Consequences for Southeastern Indians. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Biloxi, MS, November 6-10, 2002 The Chickasaw Red/W hite Moiety System and the Jockeying for Position in the Colonial Economy. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada, October 16-20, 2002. Tracking Cultural Continuities. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology, Mobile, AL, January 8-12, 2002.

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Chickasaw Factionalism. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Chattanooga, TN, November 14-17, 2001. Raiding the Remains: Indian Slave Traders and the Collapse of the Southeastern Chiefdoms. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Chattanooga, TN, November 14-17, 2001. Seventeenth-Century Slave Raiding and the Formation of a Chickasaw Identity. Presented at the 2001 Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, Nashville, TN, April 5-8, 2001. The French Connection: The Ethnohistorical Evidence for a Chickasaw/French Connection. Presented at the Fifty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Macon, GA, November 8-11, 2000. Slave Raiders in the South, AD 1600-1800: The Iroquois Question. Invited lecturer for the Liberal Arts Faculty Forum, University of Mississippi, April 18, 2000. The Creeks and the Americans in the Age of Washington. Presented at The South in the Age of Washington Conference, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, MS October 28-30, 1999. Georgia Backcountry: Indians, Settlers, and Slaves on the Late Eighteenth-Century Georgia Frontier. Presented at The Newtown Lecture Series (regional), Macon State College, Macon, GA, April 22, 1999. W omen Doing W ell: Creek Indian W omen as Agrarian Entrepreneurs on the Late Eighteenth Century Frontier. Presented at Southern History Symposium (local), Department of History and W omen Studies, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, March 12, 1999. Putting Native Americans into Southern History. Presented at Brown Bag Lecture Series, Center for the Study of Southern Culture, University of Mississippi, Oxford, April 15, 1998. Red, W hite, and Black: Diversity on the Southern Frontier. Presented at Black History Month Brown Bag, Center for the Study of Southern Culture, University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi, February 2, 1998. Creek Ranchers and Changing Settlement Patterns at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century. Presented at the 62nd

Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Invited Session, Nashville, Tennessee, April 2 - 6, 1997. Creek Indian Land Requirements on the Late Eighteenth-Century Southern Frontier. Presented at the 95th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, San Francisco, California, November 20 - 24, 1996. The Early Historic Transformation of the Southeastern Indians. Co-authored with Charles Hudson. Presented at the 30th Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, February 17 - 20, 1996. The U. S. Government's Civilization Plan for the Creek Indians - A Late Eighteenth-Century Experiment in Development. Presented at the 93rd Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Atlanta, Georgia, November 30 - December 4, 1994. The Environment of the Late Eighteenth-Century Lower Creeks. Presented at the symposium "The Social and Environmental History of the Eighteenth-Century Southeast," University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, April 29, 1994. Horse Stealing as an Informal Economic Strategy on the Late Eighteenth Century Southern Frontier. Presented at the 1993 Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Bloomington, Indiana, November 3 - 6, 1993. An Environmental Look at Creek Indian Place Names in Georgia and Alabama. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, Savannah, Georgia, March 23 - 26, 1993. Benjamin Hawkins and the Creek Indians on the Eighteenth-Century Southern Frontier. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, St. Augustine, Florida, April 24 - 27, 1992.

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Oglethorpe and the Georgia Indians. Presented at the symposium "Savannah, Its History and Development," Annual Meeting of the Society for Historical Archeology, Savannah, Georgia, January 7 - 11, 1987. The Search for Sixes Old Town, Cherokee, Georgia, 1830. Co-authored with W . Dean W ood. Presented at the Annual Southeastern Archeological Conference in Charleston, South Carolina, November 11 - 14, 1987. The Georgia Indians at the Time of Removal. Presented at the Shoulderbone Treaty Lecture Series, University of Georgia Library, Rare Book Department, Athens, Georgia, June 15, 1986. Everyday Life in the Southeastern Chiefdoms. Presented at the Southeastern Indian Chiefdoms Lecture Series, Athens, Georgia, 1986. Flintlocks and Slavecatchers: Economic Transformations of the Georgia Indians. Presented at the symposium "Georgia's Legacy of Native Indian Culture," Etowah Indian Mounds, Cartersville, Georgia, July 16, 1983. Button-snakeroot: Plant Symbolism among the Cherokee Indians. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, Lexington, Kentucky, 1977. Tobacco Among the Cherokee. Presented at the Conference of Cherokee and Iroquois Studies, Cherokee, North Carolina, 1976. Symposia/Workshops/Panels/Roundtables Organized or Chaired Co-organizer, chair, “The Historical Turn in American Archaeology,” panel co-organized with Eric Bowne, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 8-12, 2017, Tulsa, OK. Chair, “Landscapes of Sovereignty: Change and Persistence in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Native South,” panel organized by Jeff W ashburn, Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, November 9-11, 2016, Nashville, TN. Chair, “Deconstructing Intimacy in the Native and Colonial Southeast, 1700-1800,” panel organized by Bryan Rindfleisch, Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, November 5-7, 2015, Las Vegas, ND. Organizer, chair, “Charles Hudson and the Ethnohistory of the Native South: A Roundtable Discussion.” Roundtable at the American Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting, October 8-12, 2014 Indianapolis,IN. Co-organizer, “Indians as Southerners, Southerners as Indians: Rethinking the History of a Region,” Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, September 2014. Symposium co-organized with Andrew Frank and Kristofer Ray. Co-oganizer, chair, and participant. “Rembering Charlie Hudson, Tony Parades, Mike Green, and Charlie Hudson,” panel at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Anthropological Society, March 30-April 2, 2014, Cherokee, North Carolina. Chair, “Teaching Ancient America,” roundtable at the Annual Meeting of the Organization of American Historians, April 10-13, 2014, Atlanta, Georgia. Chair, “Indigenizing Civilization: Native Americans and the United States,” panel at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, September 11-14, 2013, New Orleans, Louisiana. Organizer and moderator, “Remembering Charlie: A Roundtable Discussion on the Life and W ork of Charles Hudson,” roundtable at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 6-10, 2013, Tampa, Florida,. Organizer, “A Line in the Sand: Integrating Indians into the American South Narrative,” panel at the American Society for Ethnohistory, November 1-6, 2006, W illiamsburg, VA. Co-organizer, “Mapping the Shatter Zone: The Colonial Indian Slave Trade and the Southeastern Indians,” panel at the American Society for Ethnohistory, November 16-20, 2006, Santa Fe, NM.

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Organizer, “The Chickasaws,” panel at the Annual Convention of the Southern Historical Association, November 3-6, Memphis, TN, 2004. Co-organizer, “The Social History of the Southeastern Indians: The Seventeenth-Century Indian Slave Trade and the Creation of a Shatter Zone,” panel at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 6-10, Biloxi, Mississippi, 2002. Co-Organizer,“The Social History of the Southeastern Indians: Papers in Honor of Charles Hudson,” panel at the Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, November 14-17, Chattanooga, Tennessee, 2001. Chair, American Indian Studies Session, 93rd Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Atlanta, Georgia, November 30 - December 4, 1994. Co-organizer, “The Social and Environmental History of the Eighteenth-Century Southeast,” symposium at the University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, April 29, 1994. Discussant Discussant, “Worlds in Flux: Lived Histories of the Indigenous Southeast,” panel at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Athens, GA, October 26-30, 2016. Discussant, “Mobility, Diplomacy and Identity among Eighteenth-Century Cherokees,” panel organized by Gregory Smithers, Omohundro Institute 22nd Annual Conference, Worcester, MA, June 23-26, 2016. Discussant, “Hidden in Plain Sight: Ethnohistories of the Southeastern United States,” panel organized by Kathryn Sampek and Tyler Howe, Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, November 4- 7, 2015, Las Vegas, ND Discussant and co-organizer, “Articulating an Expanding Circle: Natives in the Plantation Systems of the Circum-Caribbean,” panel co-organized with Andrew Whitaker. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, October 8-12, 2014, Indianapolis, Indiana. Discussant, “Research and Partnership: Old and New Lessons for Anthropologists from Native America,” panel organized by Lisa Lefler, American Anthropological Meetings, November 20-25, 2013, Chicago, Illinois. Discussant, “Indigenous Communication Strategies in Early America,” panel organized by George Milne, American Society for Ethnohistory, November 7-11, 2012, Springfield, MO. Discussant, 2012 Meetings of the Southern Intellectual History Circle, College of W illiam and Mary, February 23-25, 2012, W illiamsburg, VA. Discussant, “Cherokees, Europeans, and Empire, 1700-1800,” panel at the Omohundro Institute for Early American History and Culture, organized by Kristofer Ray, June 17-19, 2011, New Paltz, NY. Discussant, “Revitalizing the Protohistoric South,” panel at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, organized by Gregory A. Waselkov and Ashley A. Dumas, October 27-31, 2010, Lexington, KY. Discussant, “Indian Trade and the Emergence of a Plantation South,” panel at the American Society for Ethnohistory, organized by Kristalyn Shefveland, November 12-15, 2008 Eugene, OR. Roundtable discussant, “Removed and Invisible: W here are Native People in the Canons of Southern Studies, History, and Literature?” Roundtable at the Annual Meeting of the Native American and Indigenous Studies, organized by Annette Trezfer and Eric Anderson, April 10-12, 2008, Athens, GA. Discussant, “Strategies of Violence in Native American Societies,” panel at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory, organized by Rob Harper, November 7-11, 2007, Tulsa, OK. Discussant, “Transforming Biological Anthropology: Interdisciplinary Intersections and Theoretical Innovation,”

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panel at the Annual Meeting of the American Anthropologists Association, organized by Ann Kakaliouras, Pamela Geller, Rachel W atkins, November 15-19, 2006, San Jose, CA, Discussant, “Native Americans and the South,” Third Annual Graduate Conference on Southern History, University of Mississippi, Department of History, Oxford, Mississippi, March 20-21, 1998. Peer Reviews Alabama Review American Antiquity American Council of Learned Societies American Nineteenth Century History American Philosophical Society Cambridge University Press Catholic Historical Review Ethnohistory Euchee (Yuchi) Tribe of Indians Harvard University Press Institute for Research in the Humanities, University of Bucharest Journal of Anthropological Linguistics Journal of Anthropological Archaeology Journal of American History Journal of Early American History Journal of Nineteenth-Century American History Journal of Southern History Louisiana State University Press MacArthur Foundation Mississippi Archaeology Museum Anthropology National Endowment for the Humanities National Geographic National Science Foundation Native South Oxford University Press Social Science History Southeastern Archaeology Southern Cultures Terrae Incognitae University Press of Florida University Press of Mississippi University of Alabama Press University of Georgia Press University of New Mexico Press University of Nebraska Press University of North Carolina Press University of Oklahoma Press University of South Carolina Press West Virginia History: A Journal of Regional Studies William and Mary Quarterly Yale University Reviews for Tenure, Promotion, and Awards Augustana College, History College of William and Mary, Anthropology Columbia University, Anthropology Iowa State University, World Languages and Cultures Macon State College, History

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State University of New York (SUNY), Albany, History Stony Brook University, History Texas A&M University, History The Ohio State University, History Tulane University, Anthropology University of Alabama, Anthropology University of California at Riverside, History University of Georgia, History University of Iowa, History University of Kansas, History University of Michigan, Anthropology University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Anthropology University of Saskatchewan, History University of Tulsa, Anthropology University of West Florida, Anthropology West Virginia University, History Whittier College, Anthropology Witchita State University, History Language Skills Conversational and reading proficiency in French. Worked as office manager at Magelan Publishing Company in Paris, France for a year (1984 - 1985) and conducted archival work in Paris and Aix-en- Provence, France 2004, 2005. Professional Organizations American Anthropological Association American Society for Ethnohistory Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Southern Anthropological Society Southeastern Archaeological Conference Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture Archaeological Field and Laboratory Experience Laboratory Technician, 1985-1988, Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia. Conducted pre-colonial and post-colonial historic lithic and ceramic analysis. Field and Laboratory Technician, 1976-1981 for cultural resources management projects with the University of Georgia, University of Missouri, and Commonwealth Associates. Conducted archeological survey, testing, and excavation and pre-colonial lithic and ceramic analysis. Public Outreach Invited Speaker. “From Chicaza to Chickasaw: Hernando de Soto and the Transformation of the Chickasaw Indians,” to be presented at the Chickasaw Heritage Days, September 12, 2017, Tupelo, MS. Invited speaker. “When Giants W alked the Earth: Chief Tascaluza and Leadership in the Ancient South,” to be presented at W interville Mounds, Greenville, postponed, to be re-scheduled Invited Speaker. “The Indians of Mississippi: A Brief History.” J.D. W illiams Library, Department of Archives Brown Bag Series, April 9, 20-17, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS. Invited Speaker. “The Indians of Mississippi: A Brief History.” Lawyers and Literature, October 22, 2016, Oxford, MS. Invited Speaker. “Creek Country in Crisis: The Economic Changes in the Creek Confederacy Before Removal,” presented at “The Creeks and Their Trail of Tears: Life and Legacy,” sponsored by the Historic Chattahoochee Commission, July 24, 2014, Eufaula, Alabama.

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Invited Speaker. “From the Mississippian to the Historic Creeks,” presented in absentia at the Muskogee (Creek) Nation History Symposium, March 6-7, 2014, Okmulgee, Oklahoma. Invited Speaker. “The Heart of Creek Country,” presented in absentia at the Muskogee (Creek) Nation History Symposium, March 6-7, 2014, Okmulgee, Oklahoma. Invited Speaker. “American Indians and Natural History: Managed Landscapes in Prehistory” Presented at the Historic New Orleans Symposium, “Seeking the Unknown: Perspectives on Louisiana’s Natural History,” February 23, 2013, New Orleans, Louisiana. Invited Speaker. “Indian Country in 1812,” Summer Lecture Series, Oakville Indian Mounds Educational Center, Danville, AL, August 16, 2012. Invited Speaker. “A W alk Through Creek Country,” Zahner Conservation Lectures, Highlands Nature Center, Highlands, NC, July 28, 2005. Invited speaker. “Chickasaw Slaving: Responding in a Shatter Zone,” University of Southern Mississippi, Department of History, Hattiesburg, MS, February 26-27, 2004. Invited speaker. “The Heart of Creek Country.” Landmarks Foundation of Montgomery symposium “Alabama Frontier: Cultural Crossroads, Montgomery, AL, January 24, 2004. Invited speaker. W omen’s Awareness W eek, Thacker Mountain Radio Program, Oxford, MS, March 15, 2001. Invited speaker. “Chickasaw Slave Raiding,” Kiwanis Club, Oxford, MS, September 27, 2000. Invited speaker. “Native American History in the South.” Lecture presented at Urban School of San Francisco Southern Studies Program, University of Mississippi, Center for the Study of Southern Culture, and Institute for Continuing Studies, Oxford, Mississippi, March 0-10, 1998. Invited speaker. “Late Eighteenth-Century Creek Indian Impact on River Corridors in Georgia.” Lecture presented at River Corridor’s Initiative Exhibition and Lecture Series, Sautee-Nacoochee Community Center, Sautee, GA, September 28, 1996. Invited speaker. “Late Eighteenth-Century Lower Creek Land Use and Ecology.” Lecture presented at Visions of Our Past: Native Americans, Naturalists, Soldiers, Settlers. Alabama Arts and Humanities Center, Auburn University, Eufaula, AL, September 15, 1996. Member of W orkshop Faculty. Archaeology and Native Americans of Georgia Lecture Series, Athens, Georgia. Sponsored by the University of Georgia's Museum of Natural History, the Georgia Center for Continuing Education, and in cooperation with the Lamar Institute, 1989, 1991, 1992. Member of W orkshop Faculty. Indian Awareness Workshop, W inder, Georgia. Sponsored by Fort Yargo State Park and Camp W ill-A-W ay, 1987. References Available on request.