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Eileen M. Mulhare ( de la Torre )
Research Associate
Anthropology, Colgate University

About the Scholar...
“Eileen M. Mulhare (de la Torre) is Research Associate in Anthropology at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York. She is a specialist in the indigenous peoples of Mexico and Guatemala, particularly rural development, social organization, ethnohistory, gender relations and popular Catholicism..... In central Mexico her fieldwork and archival research focus primarily on Totimehuacán, a post-Nahua community in the Puebla Valley (1977-1979, and annual fieldwork, 1980 to present). Other research travels include Guatemala (Kaqchikel, K'iche', and Tz'utujiil Maya communities, 1997),” among other international sites. [Source for quotes: http://people.colgate.edu/emulhare/biograph.html. See also her resume: http://people.colgate.edu/emulhare/resume.html.]


Contact Information
Address:13 Oak Drive
City: Hamilton
State/Province: New York
Country: USA
Postal Code: 13346
Phone: (315) 824-3102
Webpage: http://people.colgate.edu/emulhare/emulhare.html
Email: emulhare@mail.colgate.edu

 

Sites Listed in the VMA:

[Review of] Bernardino de Sahagún, First Anthropologist, by Miguel León-Portilla (2002), and Sahagún and the Transition to Modernity, by Walden Browne (2000) - http://www.ipfw.edu/soca/Nahua35.html#anchor334974
Day of the Dead in Totimehuacán: A Photographic Study - http://www.ixeh.net/travel/ddm/ddm-en/ddm-start.html
Sanctuaries of Totimehuacán: A Photographic Study - http://www.ixeh.net/travel/snt/snt-en/snt-start.html
Totimehuacán in the Historia Tolteca-Chichimeca - http://www.ixeh.net/travel/htc/htc-en/htc-start.html
[Review of] Our Lady of Guadalupe: The Origins and Sources of a Mexican National Symbol, 1531-1797, by Stafford Poole, C.M. (1995). -
Bead-Prayers and the Spiritual Conquest of Nahua Mexico: Gante's “Coronas” of 1553. - http://www.ejournal.unam.mx/cultura_nahuatl/ecnahuatl33/ECN03310.pdf