When will this be offered and at what URL?
>The American Museum of Natural History and Discovery Channel Online present
>Marks of Identity: A Live Web Cast
>
>
>When is body art about fashion? When is it about beauty? What do these
>words mean? For individuals? For different communities? How do societal
>standards and conventions form and affect our views of self and thus our
>body art? And when does beauty blend into issues of race, wealth, power,
>status, and gender? Three panelists including the American Museum of
>Natural History’s Enid Schildkrout discuss and answer questions about body
>art and its relationship to trends and standards of beauty.
>
>
>Enid Schildkrout is Department Chair in the Division of Anthropology at the
>American Museum of Natural History and organizing curator for Body Art:
>Marks of Identity. She has been involved with many exhibition projects,
>including curating African Reflections: Art from Northeatern Zaire which
>resulted in a film and a prize-winning book. She received her Ph.D. in
>Social Anthropology from Cambridge University and has studied African
>cultures for three decades. Her most recent book, edited with Curtis A.
>Keim, is The Scramble for Art in Central Africa (Cambridge University Press,
>1998).
>
>Valerie Steele is Chief curator of The Museum at the Fashion Institute of
>Technology and Editor of the quarterly journal Fashion Theory: The Journal
>of Dress, Body & Culture. Her numerous books have included Shoes: A
>Lexicon of Style (Rizzoli, 1999), Fifty Years of Fashion: New Look to Now
>(Yale University Press, 1997), and Fetish: Fashion, Sex and Power (Oxford
>University Press, 1996). Currently under curation is The Corset:
>Fashioning the Body (forthcoming, January 2000). She received her Ph.D. in
>cultural history from Yale University.
>
>Noliwe Rooks is a Visiting Assistant Professor in History and African
>American Studies at Princeton University. Her book Hair Raising: Beauty,
>Culture and African American Women won the Choice Award for Outstanding
>Academic Book. She is currently at work on two projects. One is a social
>history of African American women’s magazines between 1891-1975, and the
>other is entitled Fat: An American Obsession. She received her Ph.D. in
>American Studies fr
>
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Katherine Jones
Assistant Director
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology
Harvard University
11 Divinity Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617) 495-1969
(617) 495-7535 FAX
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http://www.peabody.harvard.edu
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