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草莓社区

Dr. Christopher Hern谩ndez

Title/s:  Assistant Professor

Office #:  BVM 703, Lake Shore Campus

Phone: 773.508.3475

Email: chernandez25@luc.edu

About

Christopher Hernández is an anthropological archaeologist who received his PhD from Northwestern University in 2017. His work is fundamentally shaped by the issue of contemporary relevance. How does the past matter or not? This question stems from his upbringing in Chicago as the child of Guatemalan migrants who talked endlessly about their love for Guatemala and the importance of ancient Maya history. Searching for a sense of self in a country that treats all Latinx peoples as foreigners led him to study ancient pyramids as well as contemporary culture: given the pride felt for the Indigenous past, why are contemporary Maya peoples treated so poorly in Guatemala and other parts of Latin America? This formative experience shapes how and why he conducts research.

Research Interests

Dr. Hernández’s current research is focused on issues of archaeological ethics, the application of community-based methods, relational philosophy, and understanding social conflict in long-term perspective. Through the application of aerial laser scanning (lidar), documentary analysis, and traditional excavation methods, he investigates how the process of making war shaped landscapes at a regional level. This analysis entails collaborative research into martial tactics and the consolidation of archaeological remains to attract tourism. The reconstruction of ancient structures is conducted in service of the local Indigenous community of Puerto Bello Metzabok.

Courses Taught

  • ANTH 107 - Ancient Worlds
  • ANTH 242 - Mesoamerican Archaeology
  • ANTH 245 - Gender in Deep Time
  • ANTH 247 - Aliens, Atlantis, Archaeology
  • WSGS 201/ANTH 360 - Decoloniality, Identity, Resistance (with Study Abroad)

Selected Publications

Under review - Archaeology Isn’t Just about the Past. In Traces: An Open Introduction to Archaeology and Anthropology, edited by Isabel Scarborough, Jennifer Zovar, John Donahue, and Ian S. Ray.

 

Accepted - Tactical and Strategic Landscapes: A Study of Maya Fortification at Tzunun, Chiapas, Mexico. Submitted to Ancient Mesoamerica.

 

Accepted - Special Section: Unleashing Maya Warfare: Inquiry into the Practical Aspects of War-making. Submitted to Ancient Mesoamerica. With Justin Bracken.

 

Accepted - Cultural Dimensions of Warfare in the Maya World. Submitted to Ancient Mesoamerica. With Nam Kim (senior author), Justin Bracken, and Ken Seligson.

 

2023 - Is war inevitable? Consider the ancient Maya. Sapiens. With Justin Bracken. 

 

2022 - Lunar Power in Ancient Maya Cities. In City Nights: Archaeology of Night, Darkness, and Luminosity in Ancient Urban Environments, edited by Nancy Gonlin and Meghan Strong. Louisville: University of Colorado Press. With Kristin Landau (senior author) and Nancy Gonlin.

 

2020 - Long-Term Collaborative Research with Lacandon Maya at Mensäbäk, Chiapas, Mexico. The Mayanist, 2(1):1-20. With Joel Palka (senior author), A. Fabiola Sánchez Balderas, Ian Hollingshead, Alice Balsanelli, Santiago Juárez, Josuhé Lozada Toledo, R. Jon McGee, Sebastián Salgado-Flores.

 

2020 - Battle Lines of the North American Southwest: An Inquiry into Prehispanic and Post-Contact Pueblo Tactics of War. Kiva: Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History, 86 (1): 47-69. .

 

2019 - Maya Warfare, Symbols and Ritual Landscapes. In Seeking Conflict: Understanding Ancient Maya Hostilities Through Text and Image, edited by S.G. Morton and M.M. Peuramaki-Brown. Louisville: University Press of Colorado. With Joel Palka.

 

2019 - The Site of Noh K’uh, Chiapas, Mexico: A Late Preclassic Settlement in the Mensäbäk Basin. Latin American Antiquity, 30 (1): 211-217. doi:10.1017/laq.2018.81. With Santiago Juarez (senior author) and Sebastian Salgado-Flores.

 

2018 - Is Bearing Witness Enough? American Anthropologist, 120 (3):543-544.