Origin
Anthropology, as a unified discipline of research
and teaching at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, dates
from the year 1950. More than half a century earlier, however,
anthropology can be said to have had its beginnings in the subfield
of archaeology shortly after the University opened its doors in
1869. In 1874
Cyrus Thomas
(later of Smithsonian Institution fame) initiated the collection
and organization of archaeological materials from the southern
Illinois area for the newly founded University Museum. Although
the Thomas collections did not survive, the close ties between
archaeology, anthropology, and the Museum continued for many decades.
Thomas's early work for the Division of Mound Exploration of the
Smithsonian Institution was conducted from his base in Carbondale.
In 1950 archaeologist
J.
Charles Kelley was brought from the University of Texas to be
Director of the University Museum. He was given the dual charge of modernizing
the Museum and beginning an anthropology program at the University in
the existing Department of Sociology. Prior to that time, courses in
general anthropology and American Indians had been offered by
Louis
Petroff, an SIU sociologist with some anthropological training and
interests. Kelley added
William J. Shackelford, an archaeology
graduate student from the University of Texas, to the Museum staff,
joining amateur archaeologist
Irvin Peithman who had been hired
earlier by the Museum. Shackelford taught courses in anthropology for
two years before leaving SIUC. At about the same time,
Howard
D. Winters, also at the time a graduate student, joined the
Museum as Curator of North American Archaeology and did some teaching
in the Department of Sociology. With this beginning, in 1953 the name
of the academic unit was changed to "Department of Sociology and Anthropology."
In 1955 the nucleus of the department-to-be
was established with the addition of sociocultural anthropologist
Charles H. Lange and archaeologist
Carroll L. Riley.
These two scholars had joint appointments in the University Museum
and the Department of Sociology and Anthropology. With four anthropologists
on staff, the group moved to create a separate department and
this was accomplished in 1957. The following year
Walter W.
Taylor was added to the faculty as Professor and Chair of
the Department of Anthropology.
Also in 1958 the Department of Anthropology was designated
as a graduate and research department with only a nominal undergraduate
program. At that point, the department began making plans to offer a
Ph.D. degree in addition to its Master of Arts and Bachelor's degrees.
Three new faculty appointments in anthropology were made in 1959 and
1960:
Charles R. Kaut (sociocultural),
George W. Grace
(linguistics), and
Philip
J.C. Dark (primitive art); in addition two archaeologists,
Pedro Armillas and
Melvin L. Fowler, were added to
the Museum staff with cross-appointments to the Department. These individuals
pursued long-term research interests in Illinois, the Southwestern U.S.,
Europe, and northern and central Mexico. At the same time, Mr. Winters
departed the University. The Ph.D. program began in 1960 following the
recommendation of anthropologist Clyde K.M. Kluckhohn (Harvard University),
who had carried out the required feasibility study for the SIU administration.
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale thus became the first state
institution of higher education in Illinois to offer the doctoral degree
in anthropology.
During the 1960s the department expanded,
both in terms of its faculty and its physical space (movement
from a former residential building on Mill Street to larger quarters
in the basement of what is now Quigley Hall). In 1960 the department
awarded its first M.A. degree; its first doctoral degree was bestowed
in 1964, an occasion also marked by anthropologist Margaret Mead's
commencement address to the University. Several faculty additions
were made to the Department in the 1960s, some of whom remained
on the faculty for many years: cultural anthropologist
Jerome
Handler , linguist
Joel Maring, Southeastern U.S.
archaeologist
Jon Muller and
Maya archaeologist
Robert L. Rands. Others were with the
department for shorter intervals (e.g., the department's first
physical anthropologist,
Roger Heglar; also
Marie Doenges,
Milton Altschuler ,
Adrian Gerbrands,
Lee Guemple,
Bruce MacLachlan , and
Roy Wagner). Along with these
additions came an expansion of geographical areas of faculty research
and student training, with continuing work in Mexico, and the
Southwestern U.S., and new projects in New Guinea, Eastern U.S.,
Ecuador, sub-Arctic, and the Maya area.
The 1970s were similarly a time of considerable turnover
in department faculty, reorientations within its organization, and movement
to its present location on the north end of Faner Hall in 1975. In 1973
archaeologist
George
Gumerman joined the faculty and in 1978 founded the
Center for Archaeological Investigations (CAI) . The CAI
became a separate research unit within the College of Liberal Arts,
working in close cooperation with the Department and taking over many
of the research and publication activities formerly in the University
Museum. Gumerman, the CAI, and the Department of Anthropology were closely
identified with Southwestern archaeology and the Black Mesa Project
(Arizona) during the succeeding decade, with several faculty appointments
in archaeology. Other additions to the faculty in the early 1970s included
social anthropologists
Edwin Cook and
Ester Maring, and
linguist
Lionel
Bender . Three physical anthropologists joined the faculty at
the end of the decade,
Dean Falk (1977, departed 1979),
Robert Corruccini with diverse research interests in human variation,
human evolution, and teeth (1978) and
Susan Ford with research interests in evolutionary biology and
New World monkeys (1979). These additions spurred the development of
a strong graduate program in bioanthropology in the 1980's and 1990's.
Walter Taylor retired in 1974 and Philip Dark retired in 1978, the same
year that Cook left the University.
The middle 1980s and early 1990s saw a number
of retirements, reassignments, and new hires that directed the Department
into its current orientations. Two sociocultural anthropologists
were added to our faculty:
Jane Adams (research
concerning southern Illinois farm women and rural agricultural economies);
and
Jonathan Hill
(Amazonian [Venezuela] ethnology and history, ethnomusicology).
Another biological anthropologist,
Brenda Benefit, joined
the faculty in 1990, adding research specialization in hominoid
evolution and Old World anthropoids through her field research in
Kenya (Benefit left SIU in 2002). During this same time three archaeologists
on the faculty retired, Carroll Riley in 1987, and George Gumerman
and Robert Rands in 1990; shortly thereafter two sociocultural faculty
(Lionel Bender and Jerome Handler) transferred to other academic
units in the College of Liberal Arts and Joel and Ester Maring retired
in 1995 and 1996 respectively. New hires in archaeology in 1991
were
Don S. Rice as
Director of the Center for Archaeological Investigations, with research
interests in lowland Maya settlement, ecology, and agriculture,
and
Prudence M. Rice
with research in the colonial period southern Andes, ceramics, and
the lowland Maya. In 1994 a third new archaeologist joined the faculty,
Izumi Shimada ,
with long-standing field research on the north coast of Peru. Beginning
in 1995 the department initiated a series of replacement hires in
sociocultural anthropology, bringing in
John McCall (Africa[Nigeria],
performance) and
C. Andrew Hofling (Maya,
linguistics), and
David Sutton
(Greece, historical consciousness).
The years after 2000 saw a string of new
hires. At the end of the 2000-1 academic year, Jon Muller
retired after a lengthy career of teaching archaeology and serving
in various University administrative offices.
Paul Welch (eastern US archaeology)
was brought in to replace him in 2001.
Kevin Foster (race
and education in the US) was hired at the same time, with a joint
appointment in Anthropology and Black American Studies (Foster
left SIU in 2005). With both Don Rice and Pru Rice having moved
into administrative postions in the University, in 2002
Andrew Balkansky (State formation
in Oaxaca) was brought into the department to help cover Mesoamerican
archaeology. The biological anthropologist Brenda Benefit moved
to a different university in 2002, and was replaced first by
Christopher Stojanowski, who two years later also moved elsewhere.
This position is now filled by
Ulrich Reichard, an expert
in gibbon behavior. A new position is now occupied by
Roberto
Barrios whose work focuses on the recovery efforts after disasters
such as hurricanes.
Janet Fuller, who
studies bilingualism, language contact, and sociolinguistics,
transferred into our department from Linguistics in 2004.
In 2005 a third anthropological linguist,
Anthony Webster (Athabaskan
languages, ethnopoetics), joined Fuller and Hofling to make our
department one of the larger concentrations of anthropological
linguists in the country. Finally, in 2006 a new position in
osteology/forensic anthropology was created and is staffed by
Tracy Prowse, whose research focuses on Roman populations in Italy.
The faculty of the Department of Anthropology
have a distinguished record of research, publication, and student
training that is recognized throughout SIU. As evidence of this high
regard, six members of the Department have been named as SIU Outstanding
Scholars and Distinguished Professors: Carroll Riley, Jerome Handler
(1986), George Gumerman (1989),
Robert Corruccini (1994), Prudence
Rice (1997), and Izumi
Shimada (2007). Jane
Adams was named the Outstanding Teacher in the College
of Liberal Arts for 2004, and David Sutton received the same award
in 2008.
The high quality of our graduate program is also attested by University
awards given to our students. One doctoral graduate in the University
is given the Outstanding Dissertation Award each year. The anthropology
winners are: Bruce Masse, 1989, Liming Zhou, 1997; Warren Anderson,
1998; Penelope McLorg, 2000; Tim Pugh, 2001; Keith Prufer, 2002; Ron
Rich, 2003, Kevin Schwartz (Honorable Mention), 2004, Matthew A. Tornow
2006, and David Goldstein, 2008. Haagen Klaus won the Outstanding
MA Thesis Award in 2003.