Started in 1971, the Michigan Discussions in Anthropology journal brings together scholarly works from all four subfields within anthropology: archaeology, biological anthropology, ethnology, and linguistic anthropology. The journal was originally meant as a forum for students and faculty within the anthropology department at Michigan, and although their work now reaches many persons around the world, it continues to serve this initial purpose. On this site, interested parties can peruse the latest edition of the journal, look over all of the past issues, and also search the entire contents by keyword or phrase. In the latest issue, visitors can read "'Older Americans' and Alzheimer's Disease: Citizenship and Subjectivity in Contested Time" or "Bringing Body to Bear in the Andes: Ethnicity, Gender, and Health in Highland Ecuador" among others.
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