Publications
The Peabody Museum has long published a variety of print and electronic publications relating to collections, projects, and excavations conducted by Peabody Museum staff and Department of Anthropology faculty.
Current publications can be found under Books with links to purchase, while pre-1970s publications include links to texts when available.
Books
Shooting Cameras for Peace / Disparando Cámaras para la Paz
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Bronze Medal, 2021 IPPY Awards
Winner, 2021 John Collier Jr. Award
Honorable Mention, 2022 LASA Visual Culture Section Book Award
As a young Fulbright scholar in Bogotá determined to democratize the photographic gaze and bring new visions and voices to public debate about Colombia’s armed conflict, Alexander L. Fattal founded Disparando Cámaras para la Paz (Shooting Cameras for Peace). The project taught photography to young people in El Progreso, a neighborhood on the city’s outskirts that was home to families displaced by violence in the countryside. Cameras in hand, the youth had a chance to record and reimagine their daily existence.
Shooting Cameras for Peace / Disparando Cámaras para la Paz is a penetrating look at one of Latin America’s most dynamic participatory media projects. The haunting and exuberant photographs made under its auspices testify to young people’s will to play, to dream, and to survive. The images bear witness to the resilience and creativity of lives marked by a war that refuses to die.
With text in English and Spanish, Shooting Cameras for Peace / Disparando Cámaras para la Paz makes vital contributions to studies of collaborative media, photographic activism, and peace and conflict in Colombia. Fattal’s insightful text offers critical reflection on the genre of participatory photography and the structural challenges faced by similar media projects.
Skull Shapes and the Map: Craniometric Analyses in the Dispersion of Modern Homo
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In this sequel to his Cranial Variation in Man, William White Howells surveys present-day regional skull shapes by a uniform method, examining the nature and degree of cranial differences discernible between recent Homo sapiens populations around the world.
Some Early Sites in the Northern Lake Titicaca Basin
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Peabody Museum Papers Volume 27, no. 1
(Report no. 1, Peabody Museum Expeditions to Southern Peru)
Some Notes on the Archaeology of the Department of Puno, Peru
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Peabody Museum Papers Volume 27, no. 3
(Report no. 3, Peabody Museum Expeditions to Southern Peru)
Some Sex Beliefs and Practices in a Navaho Community, with Comparative Material from Other Navaho Areas
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Peabody Museum Papers Volume 40, no. 2
(Report no. 2, Ramah Project)
Stephen Dupont: Piksa Niugini Portraits and Diaries
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Foreword by Robert Gardner
Essay by Bob Connolly
"Best Books 2013...The attraction of Dupont's books is that his photographs exhibit enormous passion and enthusiasm and are an effort to unlock the nature of the relationship between photographer and subject."
—THE Magazine
This publication records acclaimed Australian photographer Stephen Dupont’s journey through some of Papua New Guinea’s (PNG) most important cultural and historical zones: the Highlands, Sepik, Bougainville, and the capital city of Port Moresby. Through images and personal diaries, Dupont’s remarkable body of work captures the human spirit of the people of PNG in their transition from tribalism to globalization. The project was conducted in 2011 with the support of the Robert Gardner Fellowship in Photography given by Harvard’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology.
Piksa Niugini consists of two hardcover books inside a special slipcase. The first volume is a collection of portraits in luscious duotone and 4-color reproduction; the second is a vibrant collection of the diaries, drawings, contact sheets, and documentary photographs that chronicle Dupont’s experience and working process and richly contextualize the more formal images in volume one. An exhibition of Dupont's New Guinea photographs is on display at the Peabody through September 2, 2013.
Dupont’s photographs have received international acclaim for their artistic integrity and valuable insight into peoples, cultures, and communities that are under threat or in the process of rapid change. The photographer’s many awards include a Robert Capa Gold Medal citation from the Overseas Press Club of America, a Bayeux War Correspondent’s Prize, and first places in the World Press Photo, Pictures of the Year International, the Australian Walkleys, and Leica/CCP Documentary Award. In 2007 Dupont was the recipient of the W. Eugene Smith Grant for Humanistic Photography for his ongoing project on Afghanistan. His work has been featured in The New Yorker, Aperture, Newsweek, GQ, French and German GEO, Le Figaro, Liberation, The Sunday Times Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, Stern, Time, and Vanity Fair.
Series
Explorations in the Department of Peten, Guatemala, Tikal: Report of Explorations for the Museum, by Teobert Maler and A Preliminary Study of the Prehistoric Ruins of Tikal, Guatemala: A Report of the Peabody Museum Expedition, 1909–1910
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Peabody Museum Memoirs Volume 5, nos. 1-2Explorations of the Upper Usumatsintla and Adjacent Region
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Peabody Museum Memoirs Volume 4, no. 1Metals from the Cenote of Sacrifice, Chichen Itza, Yucatan
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Prehistoric Ruins of Copan, Honduras: A Preliminary Report of the Explorations by the Museum, 1891–1895
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Peabody Museum Memoirs Volume 1, no. 1Archaeological Investigations in Central Utah: Joint Expedition of the University of Utah and the Peabody Museum, Harvard University
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Peabody Museum Papers Volume 17, no. 2Archaeological Survey in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, 1940–1947
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Peabody Museum Papers Volume 25, no. 1Archaeology of Northwestern Venezuela
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Peabody Museum Papers Volume 26, no. 1Archaeology of the Diquís Delta, Costa Rica
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Peabody Museum Papers Volume 51Anthropological Literature
The Peabody Museum also publishes Anthropological Literature, a research database that indexes over 660 journals in multiple languages -- a highly recommended research tool.