The Univer sit y of Utah Press SPRING/SUMMER 2022
contents
Archaeology/Anthropology 5-10 Mormon Studies 2-4
Nature and Environment 1, 11 Poetry 12 Utah History 3 Distribution Titles 13 Featured Backlist 14-16
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ON THE COVER: Photo by Gilbert Beltran on Unsplash.
Our Mission The University of Utah Press is an agency of the J. Willard Marriott Library of the University of Utah. In accordance with the mission of the University, the Press publishes and disseminates scholarly books in selected fields and other printed and recorded materials of significance to Utah, the region, the country, and the world.
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NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
Landscape of Refuge and Resistance
Andrew Gulliford
An incisive exploration of the human and environmental history of Bears Ears National Monument and its vast cultural landscape
September 2022, 512 pp., 6 x 9 75 Illustrations, 15 maps eBook 978-1-64769-078-6 Hardcover 978-1-64769-076-2 $95.00s Paper 978-1-64769-077-9 $29.95
Designated in 2016 by President Obama and reduced to 85 percent of its original size one year later by President Trump, Bears Ears National Monument continues to be a flash point of conflict between ranchers, miners, environmental groups, states’ rights advocates, and Native American activists. In this volume, Andrew Gulliford synthesizes 11,000 years of the region’s history to illuminate what’s truly at stake in this conflict and distills this geography as a place of refuge and resistance for Native Americans who seek to preserve their ancestral homes, and for the descendants of Mormon families who arrived by wagon train in 1880. Gulliford’s engaging narrative explains prehistoric Pueblo villages and cliff dwellings, Navajo and Ute history, impacts of the Atomic Age, uranium mining, and the pothunting and looting of Native graves that inspired the passage of the Antiquities Act over a century ago. The book describes how the national monument came about and its deep significance to five native tribes. Bears Ears National Monument is a bellwether for public land issues in the American West. Its recognition will be a relevant topic for years to come. Andrew Gulliford is professor of history at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado. He is an award-winning author whose books include Boomtown Blues: Colorado Oil Shale; Sacred Objects and Sacred Places: Preserving Tribal Traditions; and The Woolly West: Colorado’s Hidden History of Sheepscapes. “The work is a significant contribution to a current controversy. It presents both (several, actually) sides of questions fairly, in my opinion. In the ongoing arguments over Bears Ears, Gulliford’s book will be a resource and a reference. It presents an excellent history of Bears Ears and surrounding southeastern Utah.” —Steve Lekson, author of A Study of Southwestern Archaeology
Wonders of Sand and Stone A History of Utah’s National Parks and Monuments Frederick H. Swanson eBook 978-1-60781-7673 Hardcover 978-1-60781-765-9 $59.95 Paper 978-1-60781-766-6 $34.95 Western Lands, Western Voices Essays on Public History of the American West Edited by Gregory Smoak eBook 978-1-64769-035-9 Hardcover 978-1-64769-036-6 $70.00s Paper 978-1-64769-034-2 $35.00s
“Andrew Gulliford’s long experience with the lands and people of Utah’s San Juan County is apparent in this fair-minded, richly informative historical account.He shows how the Bears Ears National Monument became such a charged public issue and what can be learned from the ongoing struggle to protect it.” —John D. Leshy, author of Our Common Ground: A New History of America’s Public Lands
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Bears Ears
MORMON STUDIES
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
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I Spoke to You with Silence
Essays from Queer Mormons of Marginalized Genders
Edited by Kerry Spencer Pray and Jenn Lee Smith
A collection of narrative essays about the struggles of being LGBTQ+ and Mormon
July 2022, 288 pp., 6 x 9 eBook 978-1-64769-080-9 Paper 978-1-64769-079-3 $24.95
Nobody knows what to do about queer Mormons. The institutional Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints prefers to pretend they don’t exist, that they can choose their way out of who they are, leave, or at least stay quiet in a community that has no place for them. Even queer Mormons don’t know what to do about queer Mormons. Their lived experience is shrouded by a doctrine in which heteronormative marriage is non-negotiable and gender is unchangeable. For women, trans Mormons, and Mormons of other marginalized genders, this invisibility is compounded by social norms which elevate (implicitly white) cisgender male voices above those of everyone else. This collection of essays gives voice to queer Mormons. The authors who share their stories—many speaking for the first time from the closet—do so here in simple narrative prose. They talk about their identities, their experiences, their relationships, their heartbreaks, their beliefs, and the challenges they face. Some stay in the church, some do not, some are in constant battles with themselves and the people around them as they make agonizing decisions about love and faith and community. Their stories bravely convey what it means to be queer, Mormon, and marginalized— what it means to have no voice and yet to speak anyway. Kerry Spencer Pray teaches writing at Stevenson University in Owings Mills, Maryland. Mormon by birth, she taught at Brigham Young University for fourteen years and spent nearly twenty years in a mixed-orientation marriage. She lives with and coparents children with her wife and gay ex-husband. Jenn Lee Smith is founder of Bewilder Films, which focuses on stories of under-represented people. Raised an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, she began her producing career with stories at the intersection of religion and sexual/gender orientation and has since collaborated on BIPOC and environmental films. She lives in California with her husband, children, and dog.
Woman and Mormonsim Historical and Contemporary Perspectives Edited by Kate Holbrook and Matthew Bowman eBook 978-1-60781-478-8 Paper 978-1-60781-477-1 $34.95 Gay Rights and the Mormon Church Intended Actions, Unintended Consequences Gregory Prince eBook 978-1-60781-664-5 Hardcover 978-1-60781-663-8 $34.95
“This poignant, at times heartbreaking book is a testament to the resilience of LGBTQ Mormons. Focusing particularly on the little-heard stories of gay, bi/pansexual, asexual women and trans, nonbinary people, and including and giving space for people of color to share their experiences at the intersection of racism and heterosexism, this book gives people space to tell their stories. Some chronicle a lifetime struggle. Others focus on a poignant moment. It is a beautiful and important work of personal narrative and storytelling.” —Dawne Moon, author of God, Sex, and Politics: Homosexuality and Everyday Theologies
AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY/MORMON STUDIES
A Documentary and Genealogical History of Black Lives and Black Servitude in Utah Territory, 1847–1862
Amy Tanner Thiriot
The most complete history to date of the one hundred enslaved Black pioneers of Utah Territory
September 2022, 384 pp., 6 x 9 27 Illustrations eBook 978-1-64769-086-1 Hardcover 978-1-64769-084-7 $95.00s Paper 978-1-64769-085-4 $39.95
An Akan proverb says, “It is not wrong to go back for that which you have forgotten.” This belief underlies historian Amy Tanner Thiriot’s work in Slavery in Zion. The total number of those enslaved during Utah’s past has remained an open question for many years. Due to the nature of nineteenth-century records, particularly those about enslaved peoples, an exact number will never be known, but while writing this book, Thiriot documented around one hundred enslaved or indentured Black men, women, and children in Utah Territory. Using a combination of genealogical and historical research, the book brings to light events and relationships misunderstood for well over a century. Section One provides an introductory history, chapters on southern and western experiences, and information on life after emancipation. Section Two is a biographical encyclopedia with names, relationships, and experiences. Although this book contains material applicable to legal history and the history of race and Mormonism, its most important goal is to be a treasury of the experiences of Utah’s enslaved Black people so their stories can become an integral part of the history of Utah and the American West, no longer forgotten or written out of history. Amy Tanner Thiriot is an independent historian and adjunct university instructor in the BYU-Idaho Family History Research program. Her work has been published in the Deseret Book series Women of Faith in the Latter Days and in Mormonism: A Historical Encyclopedia. She blogs at TheAncestorFiles and has written several series for Keepapitchinin: The Mormon History Blog. “An important addition to the study of slavery and (most importantly) enslaved peoples in early Mormon Utah. The author should be commended for the painstaking archival work to bring together well-known documents as well as lesser-known documents related to this history.”
Feed My Sheep The Life of Alberta Henry Colleen Whitley eBook 978-1-60781-694-2 Hardcover 978-1-60781-693-5 $34.95 Sally in Three Worlds An Indian Captive in the House of Brigham Young Virginia Kerns eBook 978-1-64769-016-8 Hardcover 978-1-64769-011-3 $65.00s Paper 978-1-64769-015-1 $34.95
— Max Perry Mueller, author of Race and the Making of the Mormon People
“Slavery in Zion is the most thorough and exhaustive treatment to date of the lives of Black Utahns in the nineteenth-century. It should serve as an indispensable starting point for other researchers to explore all sorts of potentially fascinating and important topics.” —Christopher C. Jones, assistant professor of history, Brigham Young University
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Slavery in Zion
MORMON STUDIES
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
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Open Canon
Scriptures of the Latter Day Saint Diaspora
Edited by Christine Elyse Blythe, Christopher James Blythe, and Jay Burton
Brings together new and previously published essays to cover the diverse scope of scriptures in Latter Day Saint traditions
September 2022 384 pp., 6 x 9 25 Illustrations eBook 978-1-64769-083-0 Hardcover 978-1-64769-081-6 $95.00s Paper 978-1-64769-082-3 $39.95 Contributors Christopher James Blythe Christine Elyse Blythe Jay Burton Laurie Maffly-Kipp Joseph M. Spencer Chrystal Vanel Thomas G. Evans Christopher C. Smith Richard L. Saunders Kathleen Flake Richard S. Van Wagoner Steven C. Walker Allen D. Roberts Janiece Johnson Daniel P. Stone Casey Paul Griffiths Matthew Bowman Philip L. Barlow
The publication of the Book of Mormon in 1830 began a new scriptural tradition. Resisting the long-established closed biblical canon, the Book of Mormon posited that the Bible was incomplete and corrupted. With a commitment to an open canon, a variety of Latter Day Saint denominations have emerged, each offering their own scriptural works to accompany the Bible, the Book of Mormon, and other revelations of Joseph Smith. Open Canon breaks new ground as the first volume to examine these writings as a single spiritual heritage. Chapters cover both well-studied and lesser-studied works, introducing readers to scripture dictated by nineteenth- and twentieth-century revelators such as James Strang, Lucy Mack Smith, Sidney Rigdon, Harry Edgar Baker, and Charles B. Thompson, among others. Contributors detail how various Latter Day Saint denominations responded to scriptures introduced during the ministry of Joseph Smith and how churches have employed the Book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants, and the Lectures of Faith over time. Bringing together studies from across denominational boundaries, this book considers what we can learn about Latter Day Saint resistance to the closed canon and the nature of a new American scriptural tradition. Christine Blythe is the William A. Wilson Folklore Archives Specialist at Brigham Young University and a scholar of vernacular religion and belief. From 2017 to 2021 she was editor of the Intermountain West Journal of Religious Studies and is currently co-president of the Folklore Society of Utah. Christopher James Blythe is assistant professor in English at Brigham Young University. He is currently coeditor of the Journal of Mormon History and co-president of the Folklore Society of Utah. Blythe is the author of Terrible Revolution: Latter-day Saints and the American Apocalypse. Jay A. Burton is an archivist and Church history specialist in the Church History Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He is a founding editor of the Intermountain West Journal of Religious Studies. “A collection that treats the still-proliferating scriptures of the still-diverging branches of the Latter Day Saint movement both as a common phenomenon and as individual phenomena meriting equal intellectual seriousness and scholarly rigor is long overdue. This volume will be a landmark in Latter Day Saint studies.” —Jared Hickman, associate professor of English, Johns Hopkins University, and coeditor of Americanist Approaches to The Book of Mormon
ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
Apachean Origins and the Promontory, Franktown, and Dismal River Archaeological Records
Edited by John W. Ives and Joel C. Janetski
Links new research with legacy collections to enliven one of the most extraordinary stories in American indigenous history
September 2022, 384 pp., 8 1/2 x 11 97 Illustrations, 87 color images, 15 maps eBook 978-1-64769-067-0 Hardcover 978-1-64769-066-3 $75.00s
From 1930 to 1931, Julian Steward recovered hundreds of well-worn moccasins, along with mittens, bison robe fragments, bows, arrows, pottery, bone and stone tools, cordage, gaming pieces, and abundant faunal remains, making Utah’s Promontory Caves site one of the most remarkable hunter-gatherer archaeological records in western North America. Although Steward recognized that the moccasins and other artifacts were characteristic of the Canadian Subarctic and northern Plains and not the Great Basin, his findings languished for decades. This volume connects Steward’s work with results from new excavations in Promontory Caves 1 and 2 and illustrates that the early Promontory Phase resulted from an intrusive large-game hunting population very different from nearby late Fremont communities. Lingering for just one or two human generations, the cave occupants began to accept people as well as material and symbolic culture from surrounding thirteenth-century neighbors. Volume contributors employ a transdisciplinary approach to evaluate the possibility that the Promontory Phase materials reflect the presence of Apachean ancestors. In these records lies the seeds for the intensive PlainsPuebloan interactions of the centuries that followed. John W. (Jack) Ives is professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of Alberta, and adjunct professor at Simon Fraser University and the University of Saskatchewan. He was founding executive director (2008–2019) of the Institute of Prairie Archaeology, now the Institute of Prairie and Indigenous Archaeology, where he remains a research associate. He is the author of A Theory of Northern Athapaskan Prehistory.
From the Land of Ever Winter to the American Southwest Athapaskan Migrations, Mobility, and Ethnogenesis Deni J. Seymour eBook 978-1-60781-994-3 Hardcover 978-1-60781-175-6 $35.00s Julian Steward and the Great Basin The Making of an Anthropologist Richard O. Clemmer Paper 978-0-87480-949-7 $24.00
Joel C. Janetski is emeritus professor of anthropology at Brigham Young University, where he served as chair of the Department of Anthropology from 1998 to 2005. His related research is reported in books such as The Ute of Utah Lake, Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology in Utah Valley (with Grant Smith), and Archaeology and Native American History of Fish Lake, Central Utah. “An extraordinary contribution with scholarship at the highest level. The authors know the subject matter cold and thoroughly cover the literature. The Promontory project is an exciting development on many levels, beginning with longstanding questions about Athabascan origins and dispersals and working out to lingering archaeological/anthropological issues. The reach is considerable—involving the substance of linguistics and archaeology spanning western Canada, the Great Basin, and Plains through to the American Southwest. The book is extraordinarily well executed.” —David Hurst Thomas, American Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian
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Holes in Our Moccasins, Holes in Our Stories
ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
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Household Archaeology at the Bridge River Site (EeRl4), British Columbia
Spatial Distributions of Features, Lithic Artifacts, and Faunal Remains on Fifteen Anthropogenic Floors from Housepit 54
Anna Marie Prentiss, Ethan Ryan, Ashley Hampton, Kathryn Bobolinski, Pei-Lin Yu, Matthew Schmader, and Alysha Edwards
Combines academic and Indigenous insights to interpret the archaeological record of a longlived household in British Columbia
June 2022, 240 pp., 7 x 10 97 Illustrations, 1 map eBook 978-1-64769-052-6 Hardcover 978-1-64769-051-9 $60.00s
Household Archaeology at Bridge River offers a unique contribution to the study of household archaeology, providing unprecedented insights into the history of a long-lived house in the Interior Pacific Northwest. With fifteen intact anthropogenic floors dating to pre-Colonial times, Bridge River’s Housepit 54 provides an extraordinary archaeological record—the first to allow researchers to adequately test for relationships between occupational variation and social change. The authors take a methodological approach that integrates the study of household spatial organization with consideration of archaeological formation processes. Repeating the same set of analyses for each floor, they examine stability from standpoints of occupation and abandonment cycles, structure and organization of activity areas, and variation in positioning of wealth-related items. This volume is an outstanding example of research undertaken through a collaborative partnership between scholars from the University of Montana and the community of the St’át’imc Nation. Anna Marie Prentiss is Regents Professor of Anthropology at the University of Montana. She is editor of The Last House at Bridge River and author of Field Seasons, and People of the Middle Fraser Canyon, and editor of Handbook of Evolutionary Research in Archaeology.
Last House at Bridge River The Archaeology of an Aboriginal Household in British Columbia during the Fur Trade Period Anna Marie Prentiss eBook 978-1-60781-544-0 Hardcover 978-1-60781-543-3 $59.00 S Field Seasons Reflections on Career Paths and Research in American Archaeology Anna Marie Prentiss eBook 978-1-60781-221-0 Paper 978-1-60781-220-3 $25.00
“A significant contribution to analytical methods in household archaeology. There are relatively few studies that can examine changes in the use of a single house structure over this much time. The careful hypothesis-testing using traditional knowledge as a frame of reference makes this study a model for others in this field.” —Amber Johnson, Truman State University
“The longevity and complexity of pithouse occupations at Bridge River—and potentially at other sites nearby—are profoundly interesting findings, and the balance evident in the Fraser River Valley between tendencies towards hierarchy/inequality and egalitarianism/communality is fascinating. These topics and sophisticated insights from this book are of great interest to global conversations in archaeology.” —Christopher B. Rodning, Tulane University
ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
The Jackson Flat Reservoir Project
Edited by Heidi Roberts, Richard V. N. Ahlstrom, and Jerry D. Spangler
Presents new perspectives on the Archaic period and the development of farming in the Far Western Pueblo region
August 2022, 384 pp., 81/2 x 11 142 color images, 75 Illustrations, 25 maps eBook 978-1-64769-065-6 Hardcover 978-1-64769-064-9 $80.00s
The Basketmaker presence in southern Utah has traditionally been viewed as peripheral to developments originating in the Four Corners region. Far Western Basketmaker Beginnings offers an entirely new and provocative perspective—that the origins of farming on the northern Colorado Plateau are instead found far to the west along Kanab Creek. This volume, based on the results of excavations at Jackson Flat Reservoir south of Kanab, examines a litany of firsts: the earliest Archaic pithouses ever found in this region, evidence that maize farmers arrived here a thousand years earlier than previously reported, and the emergence of a complex Basketmaker farming and foraging culture. Specialists in Far Western Puebloan culture, architecture, settlement patterns, subsistence, chronometry, and prehistoric technologies make a compelling case that farming was introduced to the region by San Pedro immigrants, and that the blending of farmers with local foraging groups gave rise to a Basketmaker lifeway by 200 BC. This book marks a giant leap forward in archaeologists’ understanding of the earliest maize farmers north and west of the Colorado River. Heidi Roberts is founder of HRA Conservation Archaeology, and has directed large excavation and multiyear research projects throughout the Great Basin and Southwest. In addition to professional publications, she is author of the novel The Archaeological Adventures of I. V. Jones. Richard V. N. Ahlstrom is retired principal from HRA Conservation Archaeology. He has published numerous journal articles and book chapters on archaeology and dendrochronology in the Southwest and Great Basin. Jerry D. Spangler is director of the Colorado Plateau Archaeological Alliance. He is author or coauthor of several books, including Nine Mile Canyon and The Crimson Cowboys.
Foragers and Farmers of the Northern Kayenta Region Excavations along the Navajo Mountain Road Phil Geib eBook 978-1-60781-999-8 Hardcover 978-1-60781-003-2 $35.00s Late Holocene Research on Foragers and Farmers in the Desert West Edited by Barbara J. Roth and Maxine E. McBrinn eBook 978-1-60781-447-4 Hardcover 978-1-60781-446-7 $50.00s
“Adds considerably to the archaeological facts for an area that is too often neglected by southwestern prehistorians. More than that, the authors have used this new knowledge to address several research topics that are central to explanatory accounts on a local level and also at regional and panregional scales. Several thought-provoking and challenging interpretations are put forth that are sure to spur on new research. This work will doubtless serve as a standard reference for southwestern archaeologists working in the Virgin or Far Western Pueblo region.” —Phil R. Geib, assistant professor of anthropology, University of Nebraska–Lincoln
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Far Western Basketmaker Beginnings
ARCHAEOLOGY
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
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Seven Thousand Years of Native American History in the Sacramento Valley Results of Archaeological Investigations near Hamilton City, California
University of Utah Anthropological Papers No. 136 William R. Hildebrandt and Kelly R. McGuire
Shares new discoveries about Native American history in the Sacramento Valley and the historical ecology of its fisheries
June 2022, 240 pp., 8 1/2 x 11 113 Illustrations, 8 maps eBook 978-1-64769-063-2 Paper 978-1-64769-046-5 $45.00s
The Sacramento Valley of northern California was a rich, diverse environment that supported some of the densest populations of nonagricultural people in the world. Periodic flooding, however, has buried much of the valley’s deep cultural history under alluvium. This volume shares the discovery of four buried archaeological sites, including one dating to 7,000 years ago, filled with a diversified assemblage of artifacts and a rich assortment of food remains. Stone net sinkers and associated fish bones represent the oldest fishery ever documented in the interior of California, while items such as marine shell beads and exotic obsidian, and some of the oldest charmstones ever recovered in California provide evidence for long-distance trade networks. The other three sites date between 4000 and 300 years ago and reflect increasing human population density, technological innovation, and the rise of sedentism and territoriality. This historical sequence culminated in findings from a 400- to 300-year-old house complex probably occupied by the Mechoopda Indian Tribe, who collaborated with the authors throughout the project. William R. Hildebrandt and Kelly R. McGuire are archaeologists at Far Western Anthropological Research Group, headquartered in Davis, California. They have published their findings from cultural resource management studies in academic journals, monographs, and books, and they also produce films, school curricula, and other educational materials for the public.
Hunters of the Mid-Holocene Forest Old Cordilleran Culture Sites at Granite Falls, Washington James C. Chatters, Jason B. Cooper, and Philippe D. LeTourneau eBook 978-1-64769-007-6 Paper 978-1-64769-006-9 $55.00s The Prehistory of Morro Bay Central California's Overlooked Estuary Edited by Terry L. Jones, Deborah A. Jones, William Hildebrandt, Kacey Hadick, and Patricia Mikkelsen Paper 978-1-60781-706-2 $45.00s
“This book is hugely important. It is the first publication that provides a well-supported backstory for the emergence of the California acorn economy. It includes fish and botanical remains from well-dated, well-sampled occupations that indicate reliance on acorns and fishing as far back as 7,000 cal BP., pushing the roots of this remarkable way of life thousands of years earlier than previously thought.” —Terry L. Jones, professor of anthropology, California Polytechnic State University
“This will stand as important regional literature. The discovery of extremely ancient archaeological deposits in the Sacramento Valley, where old surfaces and sites are generally buried beneath thick alluvium, is of itself important. The study also reports on robust faunal and botanical assemblages that are largely lacking from this area.” —Mark E. Basgall, professor emeritus, Department of Anthropology, California
ARCHAEOLOGY
A Natural and Cultural History of North Warner Valley, Oregon
University of Utah Anthropological Papers No. 137 Geoffrey M. Smith Foreword by Don D. and Catherine S. Fowler
This study draws on paleoenvironmental reconstruction, rockshelter excavations, and archaeological surveys to outline the history of an understudied valley in the Oregon Desert
August 2022, 240 pp., 8 1/2 x 11 66 Illustrations, 8 maps eBook 978-1-64769-075-5 Paper 978-1-64769-074-8 $40.00s
Contributions by Pat Barker, Erica J. Bradley, Anna J. Camp, Judson B. Finley, Denay Grund, Eugene M. Hattori, Bryan S. Hockett, Christopher S. Jazwa, Jaime L. Kennedy, Donald D. Pattee, Evan J. Pellegrini, Richard L. Rosencrance, Daniel O. Stueber, Madeline Ware Van der Voort, and Teresa A. Wriston
This volume tracks 13,000 years of environmental and cultural change in North Warner Valley—part of the Oregon Desert that has largely escaped researchers’ attention. The authors present a decade of fieldwork and laboratory analyses that reveal a record of human activity that waxed and waned with local and regional environmental and social change. Open-air sites, lithic technology, plant and animal foods, and bone and shell objects—most from a stratified rockshelter record that spans almost ten millennia—tell a story of people who visited North Warner Valley periodically to collect marsh plants, rabbits, and other resources. Smith and colleagues present their work in a way that allows readers to understand not only how people adapted to local change but also how North Warner Valley fit into the complex mosaic of precontact history in the American West. This research is the most comprehensive work conducted in the northern Great Basin in more than two decades. Its multidisciplinary nature should interest students of natural and cultural history, archaeology, and Indigenous lifeways. Geoffrey Smith is Regents’ Professor and executive director of the Great Basin Paleoindian Research Unit in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Nevada, Reno. He has worked in the American West for more than two decades and has authored more than fifty journal articles and book chapters. “The book presents a trove of well-collected data, up-to-date techniques, and valley-focused synthesis. It is a truly multidisciplinary effort with advanced practitioners and talented students. As a reader, I benefitted from clear organization, clear questions, and logical sequence.”
Prehistoric Quarries and Terranes The Modena and Tempiute Obsidian Sources Michael Shott eBook 978-1-64769-070-0 hardcover 978-1-64769-010-6 $70.00s Foragers on America’s Western Edge The Archaeology of California’s Pecho Coast By Terry L. Jones, Brian F. Codding eBook 978-1-60781-644-7 Hardcover 978-1-60781-643-0 $50.00s
—D. Craig Young, principal investigator and director of cultural resources consulting and research, Far Western Anthropological Research Inc., Great Basin Branch, Nevada
“In the tradition of longer-term research in the Fort Rock Basin to the west and Steens Mountain to the east, [this study] serves to address a poorly documented area between these preceding efforts. The information on the Lake Warner lake level history, the nature of the early LSPl occupations, and the evidence for large-scale rabbit drives are especially notable… An excellent and important study.” —Thomas Connolly, archaeological research director, University of Oregon Museum of Natural & Cultural History
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In the Shadow of the Steamboat
ARCHAEOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
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Living and Dying on the Periphery The Archaeology and Human Remains from Two 13–15th Century AD Villages in Southeastern New Mexico
Jamie L. Clark and John D. Speth
Sheds light on the archaeology of a little-known region of southeastern New Mexico, whose people hunted bison and traded with Pueblo farmers but later succumbed to intense conflict among competing communities
May 2022, 370 pp., 7 x 19 70 illustrations, 9 maps eBook 978-1-64769-054-0 Hardcover 978-1-64769-053-3 $75.00s
When one thinks about southwestern archaeology, multistoried villages and cliff-dwellings generally come to mind. But on the eastern periphery of the Southwest, where mesas and mountains give way to vast grasslands, other types of villages once thrived. In this volume, archaeologists Jamie Clark and John Speth document the lives and lifeways of the people who inhabited two of these villages—Henderson and Bloom Mound. The villagers hunted bison on the plains and exchanged meat and hides with Puebloan peoples for pottery, turquoise, marine shells, and other goods. The origins of these close social and economic ties between bison hunters and village farmers, often referred to as “Plains-Pueblo interaction,” have intrigued anthropologists for generations. The excavations at Henderson and Bloom Mound provide fascinating new insights into when, how, and why these relationships came about. Summarizing results from eight seasons of research, Clark and Speth document human burials and associated grave offerings from the two sites. In so doing, they discuss evidence for pathologies and trauma, raising questions about the nature and causes of violence that led not only to the demise of Henderson and Bloom Mound, but also to the abandonment of many other farming-hunting communities in the surrounding region. Jamie L. Clark is assistant professor of anthropology in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at George Mason University. She is coeditor (with John D. Speth) of Zooarchaeology and Modern Human Origins: Human Hunting Behavior During the Later Pleistocene.
A Study of Southwestern Archaeology Stephen H. Lekson eBook 978-1-60781-642-3 Paper 978-1-60781-641-6 $34.95 The Casas Grandes World Edited by Curtis Schaafsma & Carroll Riley eBook 978-0-58512-819-1 Paper 978-1-60781-000-1 $29.95
John D. Speth is Arthur F. Thurnau Professor emeritus of Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Michigan. His books include Zooarchaeology and Modern Human Origins: Human Hunting Behavior During the Later Pleistocene (coedited with Jamie L. Clark); The Paleoanthropology and Archaeology of Big-Game Hunting: Protein, Fat, or Politics?; and Human Paleoecology in the Levantine Corridor (coedited with Naama Goren-Inbar). “This is a severely understudied region that has a fascinating but enigmatic place in the prehistory of the southwestern US/northwestern Mexico. Clark and Speth provide an intriguing synthesis of the current state of knowledge, stitching together more than two decades of excavation to place both sites into local and regional context. The synthesis is thoughtful, original, and provocative.” — Thomas R. Rocek, professor of anthropology, University of Delaware
NATURE & ENVIRONMENT
Eric J. Wagner
The most up-to-date and comprehensive guide available for identifying snails, slugs, and bivalves in Utah and neighboring areas
September 2022, 400 pp., 6 x 9 336 color illustrations eBook 978-1-64769-089-2 Hardcover 978-1-64769-087-8 $95.00s Paper 978-1-64769-088-5 $44.95
The Utah Mollusk Identification Guide offers up-to-date information for identifying aquatic and terrestrial snails, slugs, clams, and mussels within the state of Utah, providing comparative tables, taxonomic keys, and more than 230 images, including many type specimen images published for the first time. Amateur naturalists and biologists alike will benefit from detailed information regarding size, type, specimen location, junior synonyms (including taxonomy notes), original descriptions for each of the 139 species, and comments to help differentiate similar species. In contrast to older guides, this book includes data on the external and internal anatomy of mollusks. Taxonomic names are updated to incorporate the latest information available. Family descriptions and miscellaneous data on ecology, life history, and genetics are also presented. Distribution data are based on historical articles, museum records, personal observations, and collections. Although the focus is on Utah mollusks, many species are widely distributed and the data, images, references, and taxonomy details within the guide will be of interest to many outside the state. Eric J. Wagner recently retired from the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, where he worked for 30 years conducting fisheries and aquaculture research and monitoring aquatic invasive species. He has authored numerous research articles on aquaculture and A Guide to the Identification of Tailed Myxobolidae of the World, an open-access textbook and guide to a group of fish parasites in the phylum Myxozoa. “The first update of Utah mollusks since the 1929 Chamberlin and Jones volume. This book will unify the taxonomy in Utah and adjacent regions of aquatic and terrestrial mollusks and their habitat, a necessity for intermountain biological diversity and for conservation assessments.” —Peter Hovingh, retired biologist, expert on western mollusks
Giant Sloths and Sabertooth Cats Extinct Mammals and the Archaeology of the Ice Age Great Basin Donald Grayson eBook 978-1-60781-470-2 Paper 978-1-60781-469-6 $24.95 Shellfish and the Celestial Empire The Rise and Fall of Commercial Abalone Fishing in California Todd J. Braje eBook 978-1-60781-497-9 Paper 978-1-60781-496-2 $34.95
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Utah Mollusk Identification Guide
POETRY
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
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Inside the Storm I Want to Touch the Tremble Carolyn Oliver Foreword by Matthew Olzmann
Winner of the 2021 Agha Ali Shahid Prize in Poetry
Like the apiarist searching for honey in a seething hive, the poems of this volume are keenly aware of the world’s potential for sweetness and sting.
July 2022, 90 pp., 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 eBook 978-1-64769-090-8 Paper 978-1-64769-091-5 $14.95
Inside this debut collection, girlhood’s dangers echo, transmuted, in the poet’s fears for her son. A body just discovering the vastness of “want’s new acreage” is humbled by chronic illness. Epithalamion turns elegy. But this world that so often seems capricious in its cruelty also shelters apple orchards, glass museums, schoolchildren, century-old sharks; “there’s no accounting for / all we want to save, no names.” Oliver’s polyphonic gathering of speakers includes lovers and saints, painters and dead poets, a hawk and a mother. In varied forms (ghazals and prose poems, dialogues and erasures, bref double and Golden Shovel, among others) these poems bear witness to and seek reprieve from disasters at once commonplace and terrifying. “I can’t surface for every scalpel slice, / I need a dreamy estuary present,” she writes. Stumbling toward joy across time and space, these poems hum with fear and desire, bewildering loss, and love’s lush possibilities. Carolyn Oliver’s poems appear in The Massachusetts Review, Indiana Review, Cincinnati Review, Radar Poetry, Shenandoah, Beloit Poetry Journal, 32 Poems, Southern Indiana Review, Cherry Tree, Plume, DIALOGIST, The National Poetry Review, and in many other journals. Carolyn is the winner of the E. E. Cummings Prize from the NEPC, the Goldstein Prize from Michigan Quarterly Review, the Writer’s Block Prize in Poetry, and the Frank O’Hara Prize from The Worcester Review. She lives in Massachusetts with her family. “Inside the Storm I Want to Touch the Tremble is a marvelous book. It is at once both personal and political, searing and tender. On one page, these poems might skillfully speak to (and through) art and artists across centuries; next, they might tell a new story of Eve, contemplate the complications of America, or deftly chart the mysteries of the human spirit. Through it all, each poem is an event, and each event feels timeless and timely.” —Matthew Olzmann, author of Contradictions of Design
“In her marvelous debut collection, Carolyn Oliver brings the reader to the garden—the literal garden stalked by wasps, the metaphorical garden where Szymborska’s Polish consonants are ‘bunched like root vegetables’—a lush space of sweetness and growth but also danger. Oliver gives us the textures of a life, and the precariousness: the tremble, the crush, the dissolve, the fizzle. These are poems of the body and poems of the earth. What did I do when I finished this book? I immediately began it again.” —Maggie Smith, author of Goldenrod and Good Bones
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NWAF Paper 85
Fact, Fiction, and Polygamy
Excavations at Mound Postclassic and 3, Chiapa de Corzo, Colonial Sites of the Chiapas, Mexico Upper Grijalva River Basin in Chiapas, John E. Clark Mexico
A Tale of Utah War Intrigue, 1857–1858—A. G. Browne’s The Ward of the Three Guardians
Edited by William P. MacKinnon and Kenneth L. Alford Foreword by Richard E. Turley Jr.
Editors MacKinnon and Alford, contextualize the little-known novella by Albert G. Brown entitled Ward of the Three Guardians. The novella, published in the New York Tribune and the Atlantic, is an early example of a fact-fiction presentation on the Utah War, the Mormons of the Utah Territory, polygamy, and the important role women played in these events. This volume is an important new contribution to western history. ISBN: 978-1-64769-069-4 $24.95
Salvage operations undertaken at Mound 3 in 1965 revealed a complex architectural history of temple constructions from the Late Formative (Guanacaste) to the end of the Protoclassic (Istmo) eras, along with numerous caches, burials, and other artifactual evidence. ISBN: 978-1-949847-43-7 $80.00
NWAF Paper 86
Los Encuentros, Coapa, and Coneta
Douglas Donne Bryant This Paper presents key findings on the Postclassic and early Colonial eras in Chiapas. The sites of Los Encuentros, Coapa, and Coneta were excavated as part of the larger Upper Grijalva River Basin regional project and offshoot Colonial Coxoh Maya projects with the goal of understanding the impacts to indigenous communities after the Spanish Conquest. ISBN: 978-1-949847-44-4 $60.00
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New from Tanner Trust Fund
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
14
Across the West and Toward the North
The Last Called The Most Beautiful Mormon Colonization Place on Earth
Edited by Shannon Egan and Marthe Tolnes Fjellestad
John Gary Maxwell
FEATURED BACKLIST
Norwegian and American Landscape Photography
Across the West and Toward the North compares how photographers in Norway and the United States represented the environment in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when once-remote wildernesses were first surveyed, developed, and photographed. Making images while traversing almost inaccessible terrain—often on foot and for months at a time—photographers created a compelling visual language that came to symbolize each nation. In this edited volume, Norwegian and American scholars offer the first study of the striking parallels in the production, distribution, and reception of these modern expressions of landscape and nationhood. In recognizing how landscape photographs were made meaningful to international audiences—such as tourists, visitors to world’s fairs, scientists, politicians, and immigrants—the authors challenge notions of American exceptionalism and singularly nationalistic histories. 8 1/2 x 10 Hardcover 978-1-64769-061-8 $69.95 Paper 978-1-64769-062-5 $34.95
Polygamy, Kinship, and Wealth in Wyoming’s Bighorn Basin
John Gary Maxwell takes a detailed look at the Bighorn Basin colonization of 1900–1901, placing it in the political and socioeconomic climate of the time while examining whether the move to this out-of-the-way frontier was motivated in part by the desire to practice polygamy unnoticed. In 1896 Abraham Owen Woodruff, a rising star in LDS leadership and an ardent believer in polygamy, was appointed to head the LDS Colonization Company. Maxwell explores whether under Woodruff’s leadership the Bighorn Basin colony was intended as a means to insure the secret survival of polygamy and if his untimely death in 1904, together with the excommunication of two equally dedicated proponents of polygamy—Apostles John Whitaker Taylor and Matthias Foss Cowley—led to its collapse. 6x9 eBook 978-1-64769-060-1 Hardcover 978-1-64769-058-8 $95.00s Paper 978-1-64769-059-5 $29.95
Wallace Stegner in California
Matthew D. Stewart This book tells the story of Wallace Stegner and his family as they made a home just outside of Palo Alto, California, during its transition from the Valley of Heart’s Delight (known for its rolling hills and orchards) to Silicon Valley. In this thoughtful study of the novels Stegner wrote in California—including his Pulitzer Prize–winning Angle of Repose—readers are invited to consider with Stegner what the practice of place requires in the American West. Specialists in the literature and history of the American West will find new analyses of Stegner and his influential work. Other readers will be guided through Stegner’s work in concrete and accessible prose, and anyone who has longed for home and a sense of place will encounter a powerful, beautiful, and at times tragic attempt to build and preserve it. 6x9 eBook 978-1-64769-057-1 Hardcover 978-1-64769-055-7 $95.00s Paper 978-1-64769-056-4 $29.95
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On Desert Shores Archaeology and History of the Western Midriff Islands in the Gulf of California
Thomas Bowen
Bowen draws on a wide range of sources, including the first archaeological field work ever conducted on the islands, written accounts dating back to the sixteenth century, oral histories of native people, contemporary interviews, and his own firsthand experiences. Among those cast in the islands’ historical drama are the Seri (Comcaac) people of Sonora, the extinct Cochimís of Baja California, Spanish explorers, Jesuit missionaries, pearl fishers, egg collectors, guano miners, hydrographers, cartographers, small-scale Mexican fishermen, recreational anglers, writers, photographers, ecotourists, shipwreck victims, and, most importantly, scientists. The final chapter documents the impact of this human activity on the islands’ ecosystems and examines conservation efforts now underway. Compelling and richly illustrated, this broadly based work provides a unique picture of these extraordinary islands. 7 x 10 eBook 978-1-64769-039-7 Hardcover 978-1-64769-038-0 $70.00s
Exploring the Ancient Oceans of the Desert West
Frank DeCourten Many people appreciate the stunning vistas of the Great Basin desert; understanding the region’s geological past can provide a deeper way to know and admire this landscape. In The Great Basin Seafloor, Frank DeCourten immerses readers in a time when the Basin was covered by a vast ocean in which volcanoes exploded and sea life flourished. Written for a nontechnical audience, this book interprets the rock record left by more than 500 million years of oceanic activity, when mud and sand accumulated and solidified to produce today’s Great Basin across parts of modern Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, and California. DeCourten deciphers clues within exposed slopes and canyons to reconstruct the vanished seafloor and its volcanic events and examines fossils to reveal once-thriving ancient marine communities. Supplemental material is available online to serve as a field guide for readers wishing to explore this ancient seafloor as they travel through the region. 7 x 10 eBook 978-1-64769-050-2 Hardcover 978-1-64769-049-6 $34.95
People in a Sea Grass
Archaeology’s Changing Perspective on Indigenous Plains Communities
Edited by Matthew E. Hill Jr. and Lauren W. Ritterbush Contributors highlight how Indigenous Plains groups participated in large-scale social networks in which ideas, symbols, artifacts, and people moved across North America over the last 2,000 years. They also discuss cultural transformation, focusing on key demographic, economic, social, and ceremonial factors associated with change, including colonization and integration into the social and political economies of transatlantic societies. Cultural traditions covered include Woodland-era Kansas City Hopewell, late prehistoric Central Plains tradition, and ancestral and early historic Wichita, Pawnee and Arikara, Kanza, Plains Apache, and Puebloan migrants. As the first review of Plains archaeology in more than a decade, this book brings studies of early Indigenous peoples of the central and southern Plains into a new era. 7 x 10 eBook 978-1-64769-021-2 Hardcover 978-1-64769-020-5 $60.00s
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Winner of the Don D. and Catherine S. Fowler Prize
The Great Basin Seafloor
THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRES SPRING/SUMMER 2022
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The Archaeology of Place and Space in the West Edited by Emily Dale and Carolyn L. White
FEATURED BACKLIST
Historical archaeologists explore landscapes in the American West through many lenses, including culture contact, colonialism, labor, migration, and identity. This volume sets landscape at the center of analysis, examining space (a geographic location) and place (the lived experience of a locale) in their myriad permutations. Divided into three thematic sections—the West as space, the West as community, and the West today—the book pulls together case studies from across the American West and incorporates multivocal contributions and perspectives from archaeology, anthropology, Indigenous studies, history, Latinx studies, geography, and material culture studies. Contributors tackle questions of how historical archaeologists theoretically and methodologically define the West, conveying the historical, mythological, and physical manifestations of placemaking. eBook 978-1-64769-048-9 Hardcover 978-1-64769-047-2 $60.00s
Western Ceramic Traditions Prehistoric and Historic Native American Ceramics of the Western U. S. UUAP #135
Borderlands Histories Ethnographic Observations and Archaeological Interpretations
Edited by John Philip Carpenter and Matthew Pailes
This volume is dedicated to studies of plainwares—the undecorated ceramics that make up the majority of prehistoric ceramic assemblages worldwide. Early analyses of ceramics focused on changes in decorative design elements to establish chronologies and cultural associations. With the development of archaeometric techniques that allow direct dating of potsherds and identification of their elemental composition and residues, plainwares now provide a new source of information about the timing, manufacture, distribution, and use of ceramics. This book investigates plainwares from the far west, stretching into the Great Basin and the northwestern and southwestern edges of Arizona. Contributors use and explain recent analytical methods, including neutron activation, electron microprobe analysis, and thin-section optical mineralogy.
What are the connections between past and present peoples in the U.S. Southwest and Northwest Mexico? How were the ancient societies that occupied this landscape interconnected? Contributors leverage diverse source materials rooted in classic ethnography, oral tradition, and historical documents to offer novel answers to these questions. Running throughout the discussions is a metanarrative that reflects the tensions between disciplines such as anthropology and history and the rapidly evolving dynamic between scholars and the Indigenous subjects of past and present research. With chapters written by scholars from the U.S. and Mexico, including Indigenous coauthors, Borderlands Histories offers diverse perspectives and illustrates the range of methods and interpretive approaches employed by some of the most respected and experienced names in the field of borderlands archaeology today.
81/2 x 11 eBook 978-1-64769-043-4 Hardcover 978-1-64769-042-7 $40.00s
7 x 10 eBook 978-1-64769-027-4 Hardcover 978-1-64769-023-6 $65.00s
Edited by Suzanne Griset
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