M. Dores Cruz

Nome: M. Dores Cruz

Nacionalidade: Portuguesa
E-mail: mdores.cruz (arroba) uni-koeln.de

Graus Académicos (último): Doutoramento

Ano de conclusão do grau académico (último): 2003, Binghamton University (SUNY), USA

Vínculo Profissional: Universidade de Colónia

  

% de afetação à unidade: 0.3

Principal área científica no âmbito do CEAUP: Arqueologia Africana (Historical Archaeology in Africa)

 Outras áreas científicas: Etnoarqueologia,

Projetos em curso no âmbito do CEAUP: 

Principais publicações:  

  • M. DORES CRUZ (WORK IN PROGRESS). “TERRA DE HERÓIS: A LANDSCAPE BIOGRAPHY OF MANDLAKAZE (MOZAMBIQUE).
  • T. WIDLOK & M. DORES CRUZ (ED.) 2022.SCALE MATTERS: THE QUALITY OF QUANTITY IN HUMAN CULTURE AND SOCIALITY. BIELEFELD, TRANSCRIPT
  • M. DORES CRUZ (WITH COLLABORATION OF V. CORREIA) 2007. NORMAS DE INVENTÁRIO DE CERÂMICAS ARQUEOLÓGICAS. LISBON, INSTITUTO DE MUSEUS E CONSERVAÇÃO.
  • In prep. “Doce Inferno do Engenho:” São Tomé’s Sugar Mills and colonial landscapes in the making of the modern Atlantic Word (16th-17th century). South African Archaeological Bulletin. To be submitted for publication Spring 2023
  • Submitted/ Review Hegemonic culture in Mozambique: the case of the Museum of Revolution, Maputo. (Current Anthropology)
  • Submitted/ Review Bitter Legacy: Archaeology of Early Sugar Plantation and Slavery in São Tomé (with Larissa Thomas and Nazaré Ceita; Antiquity, Project Gallery)
  • 2022 Fractured landscape and the politics of place: remembrance and memory in Nwadajahane, Museum Anthropology, 45(1):57-71
  • 2022 São Tomé, die Wiege der Plantagensklaverei in der Zuckerwirtschaft der kolonialen Welt. DASP-Heft [Deutsche Gesellschaft für afrikanische Staaten portugiesischer Sprache], 197: 7-37.
  • 2014 The nature of culture: sites, ancestors and trees in the archaeology of Southern Mozambique. In The Archaeology of the Colonized and its Contributions to Global Archaeological Theory. Neil Ferris and Rodney Harrison (eds). Oxford Press: 123-149
  • 2013 Gendered Taskscapes: Food, Farming, and Craft Production in Banda, Ghana in the 18th-21st centuries (W/ Amanda Logan). In Comparing Craft and Culinary Practice,” a special issue of African Archaeological Review, 31: 203-231
  • 2011 Pots are pots, not people: material culture and ethnic identity in the Banda area (Ghana), 19th and 20th centuries. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa, Vol. 46 (3), Dec. 2011: 336-357 (2011)
  • “Portugal Gigante”: Nationalism, Motherland and Colonial Encounters in Portuguese School Textbooks. Habitus Revista [2007], Instituto Goiano de Pré-História e Antropologia, Universidade Católica de Goias, Brazil, 5 (2): 395-422 (2009)
  • (Book Review) Arthur, J., 2006. Living With Pottery: Ethnoarchaeology Among the Gamo of Southwest Ethiopia. In American Antiquity, 73 (3): 573-574 (2008)
  • Ceramic Production, Consumption and Exchange in the Banda Area (Ghana). (With Ann Stahl et al.). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 27: 363-381. (2008)
  • Macupulane Revisited: ceramic production fifty years after Margot Dias. Conimbriga, 45: 377-395. (2006)

R&D Supported by

R&D Unit integrated in the project number UIDB/00495/2020 (DOI 10.54499/UIDB/00495/2020) and UIDP/00495/2020.

 

Contacts

Centro de Estudos Africanos da Universidade do Porto
Via panorâmica, s/n
4150-564 Porto
Portugal

+351 22 607 71 41
ceaup@letras.up.pt