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Acknowledgements
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a c k n o w l e d g m e n t s Parts of Anthropology’s Wake have been published previously. We would like to thank those journals and their editors for permission to reproduce those pages, often somewhat revised, in this new context. A slightly different version of Chapter 1 was published in Arizona Quarterly 57.1 (Spring 2001). An earlier version of Chapter 2 appeared in Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies 23.2 (Fall 1998). The Coda includes pages that appeared, in different form, in Discourse: Journal For Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture 23.1 (Winter 2001) and in South Atlantic Quarterly 106.1 (Winter 2007). José Limón invited us to give the earliest versions of the first two chapters as conference presentations at the 1995 annual meeting of the American Ethnological Society in Austin, TX. The warm welcome our papers received at this meeting spurred the idea for the book that follows. We thus thank him and all the auditors and session participants for that memorable occasion. Michaelsen also wishes to thank the following groups for inviting him to read portions of this work and discuss it: the program in Critical Theory and the Department of English at University of California Davis; the Program in Critical and Cultural Studies at Drake University; the English Department at the University of Miami–Ohio; the Race and the TwentyFirst Century Conference at Michigan State University; the Arizona Quarterly Annual Symposium; and the Marxism 2000 conference. Among others who deserve special thanks at these several institutions and events are Scott Cutler Shershow, Patrick O’Donnell, C. Richard King, Edgar A. Dryden, and Theresa Meléndez. Johnson thanks José Buscaglia, José Antonio Baujı́n, and Rogelio Rodrı́guez Coronel for the invitation to present part of the Coda at the joint University at Buffalo–Universidad de La Habana Caribbean Studies Symposium in Havana. Additionally, he thanks Bill Egginton, Martin Hägglund, Michael J. King, and Thomas Morgan for reading and commenting on the earliest versions of his chapters. During an often-hilarious visit to Havana in December 2006, Shaun Irlam reminded us of Monty Python’s particular importance for any assessment of the current state of anthropology. xi [44.200.210.43] Project MUSE (2024-03-29 02:11 GMT) A nt hr op ol og y’ s Wak e ...