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Helen Perlstein Pollard

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Name
  
Helen Pollard


Education
  
Columbia University

Helen Perlstein Pollard https0academiaphotoscom317775785363044998

Books
  
Tariacuri's legacy, The Tarascan Civilization: A Late Prehispanic Cultural System

Helen Perlstein Pollard (born 1946) is an American academic ethnohistorian and archaeologist, noted for her publications and research on pre-Columbian cultures in the west-central Mexico region. Pollard's particular area of expertise is the study of the Tarascan state, a tributary state that flourished in the Postclassic period of Mesoamerican chronology in a region largely coinciding with the modern-day Mexican state of Michoacán. Drawing from her extensive archaeological fieldwork conducted in the Lake Pátzcuaro Basin, Pollard's research has investigated themes such as the formation of proto-states, the centralization of political control, development and emergence of social stratification and inequalities, and the human ecology of adaptations within pre-modern cultures in response to environmental changes and instabilities.

Helen Perlstein Pollard Helen Perlstein Pollard AbeBooks

As of 2009 Pollard holds a position as professor in the Department of Anthropology at Michigan State University (MSU), and is also adjunct curator at MSU Museum.

As an undergraduate Pollard studied at Barnard College, a women's liberal arts college in New York City affiliated with Columbia University, graduating in 1967. One of her contemporaries at Barnard, who graduated two years earlier, was Esther Pasztory, another Mesoamerican scholar who became renowned as an art historian and specialist in Teotihuacano art.

Pollard obtained her PhD in anthropology in 1972, awarded by Columbia University, with a dissertation entitled "Prehispanic Urbanism at Tzintzuntzan, Michoacan".

References

Helen Perlstein Pollard Wikipedia