Hannah Jopling
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BA, Mills CollegeMA, University of MarylandPhD, 2008, City University of New York
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Urban communities; landscape of race and class; United States; and African Americans
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Begun research on the black community in Annapolis, MD, 1850-1900. Also exploring the lives of African Americans in the Tenderloin District in Manhattan.
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Books
Forthcoming: 2015. Life in a Black Community: Striving for Equal Citizenship in Annapolis, MD 1902-1952. Lanham, MD, Lexington Books.
Chapters
“Remembered Communities: Gott’s Court and Hell Point in Annapolis, Maryland, 1900-1950,” in Annapolis Pasts: Historical Archaeology in Annapolis, Maryland, pp. 48-68, eds. Paul A Shackel, Paul R. Mullins, and Mark S. Warner. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1998.
“Can an African-American Historical Archaeology be an Alternative Voice,” with Mark Leone, Paul R. Mullins, Marian C. Creveling, Laurence Hurst, Barbara Jackson-Nash, Lynn D. Jones, George C. Logan, Mark Warner, in Interpreting Archaeology: Finding Meaning in the Past, eds. Ian Hodder, Michael Shanks, Alexandra Alexandri, Victor Buchli, John Carman, Jonathan Last and Gavan Lucas. New York: Routledge, 1995.
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Introduction to Cultural Anthropology; Anthropological Perspectives on Race and Ethnicity; Families Across the World; Comparative Cultures; from Ghetto to Gated Community; Oral History Field School; and Archaeology Field School.