
Visual Anthropology Review
Edited by:
Liam Buckley and Laura Lewis
Visual Anthropology Review presents research on visual studies, broadly conceived. Within its scope, the journal encompasses both the study of visual aspects of human behavior and the use of visual media in anthropological research, representation and teaching. Visual Anthropology Review is an essential publication for scholars of visual and cultural anthropology as well as students and professionals in fine arts, performing arts, design and communication.
TopNews and Announcements
Visual Anthropology Review is one of more than 20 publications featured in AnthroSource, the American Anthropological Association's online portal serving the research, teaching, and professional needs of anthropologists. Click here to learn more about AnthroSource!
Visual Anthropology Review is included in the INASP, HINARI and OARE programs. As a part of these initiatives, the journal is available (for free or at very low cost) in more than 100 developing world countries.
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TopHighlights
Read the most downloaded articles in 2009 from Visual Anthropology Review:
Graciela Iturbide as Anthropological Photographer
Stanley Brandes
Sculpting Blackness: Representations of Black-Puerto Ricans in Public Art
Hilda Llorens, Rosa E. Carrasquillo
Photographs and the Sound of History
Elizabeth Edwards
Visual Field Notes: Drawing Insights in the Yucatan
Carol Hendrickson
Post-Bourgeois Tattoo: Reflections on Skin Writing in Late Capitalist Societies
Marc Blanchard
Social Aesthetics and The Doon School
David MacDougall
Trafficking in Tobacco Farm Culture: Tobacco Companies' Use of Video Imagery to Undermine Health Policy
Martin G. Otanez, Stanton A. Glantz
Rural Woman and Modernity in Globalizing China: Seeing Jia Zhangke's The World
Arianne Gaetano
Seeing, Hearing, Feeling: Sound and the Despotism of the Eye in "Visual" Anthropology
Paul Henley
From Silicon Valley to the Valley of Teotihuacan: The "Yahoo!s" of New Media and Digital Heritage
Timothy Webmoor
