Applied Anthro in the news.
With nearly 600 communities, creeks and other landmarks bearing witness, Mississippi is home to one of the nation’s largest inventories of Native-American place names.
A new book researched and written by a Mississippi State University graduate student provides the first-ever comprehensive resource translating these locales whose identities are derived from an indigenous culture. Along the way, he also corrects more than a few errors resulting from European-American mispronunciations.
“‘Tippah,’ for instance, often has been believed to be the name of a Chickasaw chief’s wife,” said Keith A. Baca of Starkville, a master’s student in applied anthropology. His book, “Native American Place Names in Mississippi,” is published by University Press of Mississippi.
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Link to this: http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/533246/
-Jim
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James Mullooly, PhD
Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology
California State University, Fresno
Fresno, CA 93740 M/S PB 137
(o) 559-278-7574
http://www.csufresno.edu/anthropology/faculty_staff/mullooly.shtml