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Nancy Parezo
(Ph.D., 1981, University of Arizona) joined the American Indian
Studies faculty in 1998 as a tenured Professor with a shared appointment
in the Arizona State Museum (ASM). She is also an affiliated professor
in Anthropology and a Research Associate for the Field Museum of Natural
History. Professor Parezo has been with the UA since 1980 and has served
extensively on AIS and university committees. She has extensive
publications including Paths of Life: American Indians
of the Southwest and Northern Mexico (UA Press), Preserving
the Anthropological Record (Wenner-Gren Foundation), as well
as recent articles in Anthropologie et Sociétés,
Current Anthropology, Selling the Indian: Commercializing and Appropriating
American Indian Cultures, and Blackwell Companion to Native American
History, A Companion to American Indian History. Her most
current exhibits have been shown at the Denver Art Museum, the Missouri
Historical Society, and in Paris, France. Professor Parezo's had two
books in press with the University of Nebraska, Anthropology
Goes to the Fair: the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, and On Their
Own Frontier: Women Historians and the Re-visioning of the American
West, 1900 to 1906. She teaches courses in Contemporary
Indian American, cultural preservation and museum, writing tribal histories,
grantwriting, and AIS 548, a methodology course for AIS graduate students.
Fall 2005 she will;teach AIS 602, the PhD level theory course and AIS
336, Dine History and Philosophy. Professor Parezo has an extensive
record of service/outreach, including a year as loaned executive to
the Arizona Board of Regents and memberships on over a dozen major university
committees since 1990. She currently serves on the University of Arizona's
Institutional review Board in Medicine.
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This URL: http://aisp.web.arizona.edu/parezo.htm
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