About the Author:
Anne H. Sutherland has conducted extensive research on Roma Gypsies, ethnic groups in Belize, and identity and culture in Texas. She acted as writer and director for the BBC film series adaptation of her book Face Values: Some Anthropological Themes. She earned her Ph.D. in social anthropology from Oxford University and is currently a professor at the University of California–Riverside.
Review:
“For many people, Texas has always been more a state of mind than a geographic place, and finally a scholar, who really knows how to write, tells us how this idea of Texas was invented and continues to change through the constant retelling of the stories of Texas history. Anne Sutherland is an anthropologist who has written an ethnography of Texas history by weaving together the “great events” with the everyday lives of the people who made that history. From stories as important as the Alamo to those as local and colorful as “the Wild Woman of Navidad,” she illustrates the process by which people make their own history, which sometimes coincides with and sometimes contracts the history of Texas as told in scholarly works, Hollywood films, or literary fiction. Made in Texas offer a wonderful collection of stories about real people and ideas about a real place. It changes the way that we see history and helps us to see our own families and ourselves in the constantly changing images of the past.”--Jack Weatherford, DeWitt Wallace Professor of Anthropology, Macalester College (Jack Weatherford, DeWitt Wallace Professor of Anthropology, Macalester College)
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