Anthropology Associate Professor Receives Judy Ewell Award
Thursday, Apr 18, 2019
Rachel Corr, associate professor of anthropology, Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College of ʦapp was honored with the Rocky Mountain Council for Latin American Studies (RMCLAS) prestigious for .
The Judy Ewell Award honors the best publication, book or article, on women’s history or written by a woman, that began as a RMCLAS presentation.
Interwovenfocuses on the lives of native Andean families in Pelileo, a town dominated by one of Quito’s largest and longest-lasting textile mills. Rachel Corr reveals the strategies used by indigenous people to maintain their families and reconstitute their communities in the face of colonial disruptions.
In the award ceremony, the committee said, “Interwovenis a tactile, resonant work that exposes the ties that bind the global to the local and reveals how the textile economy impacted indigenous families. Most crucially, Corr argues that despite the horrendous conditions that shaped their subjectivity, the “obrajeIndians” of Pelileo found ways to forge connections with one another and create a semblance of community. This study will be required reading for all of those interested in indigenous labor, community, and ethnogenesis.”
Corr has conducted ethnographic fieldwork in Ecuador since 1990. She is the author ofRitual and Remembrance in the Ecuadorian Andes.