Anastasia Karakasidou
Anastasia Karakasidou was born in Greece and studied archaeology in the U.S. She holds a Ph.D. from Columbia University where she received solid training in social theory and historical anthropology. She conducted her dissertation fieldwork in Northern Greece, where she examined issues of ethnicity. national consciousness and agrarian transformations. Dr. Karakasidou's book Fields of Wheat, Hills of Blood: Passages to Nationhood in Greek Macedonia, 1870-1990 (University of Chicago Press, 1997) is a historical ethnography that offers an analysis of nationalism and ethnic rivalry in the Balkans, in general, and in Greek Macedonia, in particular. Topics such as the role of intellectuals, women, and the Greek Communist Party in national ideology construction in Greece were also explored in her published articles. She is presently working on a series of essays that trace the competing nationalist ideologies that divided the ethnically diverse communities in an area of Greece that border Yugoslavia and Albania.. In this recent work, Anastasia Karakasidou, through the use of both governmental archival sources, and archival sources, and oral historical reconstructions, examines such important issues as administrative goals, policing and conscripting policies, staging of national holidays and the veneration of national heroes.
Professor Karakasidou is also very interested in her teaching at Wellesley, where she holds the Whitehead Associate Professorship in Critical Thought. She has offered courses that range from evolution and diversity, to ethnographic writing, to contemporary anthropological theory, and to Orientalist discourse. She enjoys student-teacher interaction and she encourages independent and critical thinking. Combining teaching with research with research and writing, Professor Karakasidou offers a view of anthropology as living practice to her students.
Profile last updated: 6/01