[Linganth] Job position

Elise Berman eberman at uncc.edu
Tue Dec 11 19:55:11 UTC 2018


Dear all,

I just want to encourage people on this list to apply to the job
advertisement attached below for an anthropologist of the southeast! The
specific subfield is open, and we would be very excited about a linguistic
anthropologist working somewhere in the area on indigenous, minority, or
immigrant languages and peoples.

It is a lecturer position, but it is full-time and permanent (our lecturers
are renewed) and the university has instituted new opportunities for
promotion to senior lecturer or assistant/associate/full teaching
professor.

Please let me know if you have any questions:

---

The Department of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at
Charlotte invites applications for a full-time Lecturer to begin August
2019. This position is a three-year, renewable appointment
(non-tenure-track) in the Department of Anthropology.

Required qualifications include a Ph.D. in Anthropology or a related field,
and teaching experience in Anthropology at the university level. We seek an
anthropologist with the ability to teach about past or present indigenous,
diaspora or immigrant populations of the American Southeast, and who has
experience engaging with local communities. Preferred qualifications
include an intellectual focus on the Carolinas or neighboring regions.
Sub-field within Anthropology and topical specializations are open, with
preference given to scholars who will complement the department’s current
strengths.

Candidates should include in their cover letter a discussion of how their
qualifications, experience and professional background prepare them to
incorporate diversity and inclusion into their teaching and/or service
activities. Finalists will be asked during their screening interview to
discuss how the topics of diversity and inclusion are incorporated into
their teaching.
Apply at: https://jobs.uncc.edu/postings/24390
--
Elise Berman

*Talking Like Children: Language and the Production of Age in the Marshall
Islands. *Forthcoming out of Oxford University Press
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/talking-like-children-9780190876982?cc=us&lang=en&

Recent article Force Signs: Ideologies of Corporal Discipline in Academia
and the Marshall Islands
https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jola.12175

Assistant Professor
Department of Anthropology
UNC Charlotte
https://clas-pages.uncc.edu/elise-berman/
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