Alexandra Kelly

Associate Professor of History and Anthropology


Portrait of UW History Professor Alexandra Kelly

I am a historical anthropologist/archaeologist interested in 19th-century capitalist expansion, imperialism/settler colonialism, exchange, material culture, museum studies, and cultural heritage. My first book project explored the history of the ivory trade between East Africa and New England as an important site of colonial and neoliberal social production. I used the object biographies of a collection of ivory artifacts from two ivory-cutting factories in Connecticut to illuminate forgotten histories of global connection and problematize contemporary heritage discourse concerning elephants and ivory in East Africa.

My current research focuses on historical archaeology and cultural heritage in the American West, and I am co-director of the Carbon City Archaeology Project with my Anthropology colleague, Jason Toohey. We are currently surveying and excavating Carbon City, the first coal mining town established along the UPRR in Wyoming in 1868. I am also involved in several archaeological, archival, heritage, and community engagement projects across Wyoming.

I hold a dual appointment between the History and Anthropology Departments. I am the director of the UW Anthropology Museum and involved with the Museum Studies minor on campus.

I am currently accepting graduate students in both the History (M.A.) and Anthropology (M.A. and Ph.D.) programs and am especially interested in working with students on historical archaeology, material culture, museum studies, culture contact, settler colonialism, and capitalist expansion in the American West.

 Dr. Kelly is also the Director of the UW Anthropology Museum (click here for more information.)

 

Research Interests

American West, East Africa, Historical Anthropology/Archaeology, Capitalism, Globalization, Exchange/Circulation, Consumption, Material Culture, Heritage

Courses Taught

HIST/ANTH 2600: Forgotten Africa: Introduction to African Civilizations

HIST/ANTH/AMST/ART: Museology II

HIST 4030: Senior Capstone Seminar (historiography-focused)

ANTH 4010: History of Anthropological Thought

HIST 5800: History Theory

and topics seminars on Colonial Africa and Cultural Heritage Studies

 

Consuming Ivory Book Cover

Consuming Ivory: Mercantile Legacies of East Africa and New England

(University of Washington Press, 2021)

 

University of Wyoming Archaeological Field School Instagram @uwarchfieldschool


 CONTACT:

   History Building

   Room 358

   Alexandra.Kelly@uwyo.edu

 
Contact Us

History Building

Dept. 3198

1000 E. University Ave.

Laramie, WY 82071

Phone: 307-766-5101

Email: uwhistory@uwyo.edu

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