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Denise N. Green

Cornell University · Nutrition

Active 2017–2020

h-index1
Citations5
Papers31 last 5y
Funding
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About

Professor Denise N. Green is associated with the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research at Cornell University. The center assists faculty in developing translational research projects, providing support such as proposal preparation, training, technical assistance, and fostering collaborative relationships. The center also offers workshops, an intensive summer institute, and talks on current research topics related to translational research. While specific details about Professor Green's individual research focus or background are not provided on this page, her affiliation with the BCTR indicates her involvement in translational research efforts aimed at applying scientific findings to practical community and societal issues.

Research topics

  • Sociology
  • Engineering
  • Philosophy
  • Anthropology
  • Archaeology
  • Epistemology
  • Art
  • Visual arts
  • History

Selected publications

  • Her eyes, my body: Negotiating embodiment through Maya back strap weaving

    Fashion Style & Popular Culture · 2020 · 1 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Sociology
    • Sociology
    • Visual arts

    Abstract This article discusses the embodiment of making and wearing clothing through a close analysis of the weaving and production practices of a contemporary Maya weaver, Lidia López. The first author lived in San Antonio Aguas Calientes, Sacatepéquez, Guatemala where she studied the back strap loom under the instruction of master weaver, Lidia López, while the second author served as an advisor on the research project and assisted with interpretation of fieldwork data. Anthropologist Daniel Miller has encouraged a research approach that thoroughly integrates the practice of making, arguing that 'the things people make, make people'. When a person weaves cloth using centuries-old techniques and tools passed down across generations, the cloth embodies identities that transcend time and materializes networks of social relations. This brings new possibilities to ethnographic research about processes of making. If we are what we make, as Miller argued, then what are we when we make cloth? In this article we explore the production of cloth as embodied practice: weaving on the back strap loom, bringing goods to market, the practice of teaching weaving, and all of the social relationships and realities that contribute to the production of clothing. The title of this article, 'Her eyes, my body', refers to the relationship between the primary ethnographic interlocutor, Lidia Amanda López de López, and the first author as ethnographer and weaving apprentice. By teaching weaving on the back strap loom in the tradition of her antepasados (ancestors), Lidia facilitated ways of knowing – from the kitchen table to the loom, from her home to the market. Entangled and woven together through dialectics of time and space, private and public, past and present. Warp and weft are woven into cloth, culture and identities.

Frequent coauthors

  • Abby Lillethun

    1 shared
  • Amanda Denham

    University of California, Davis

    1 shared
  • Ingrid Mida

    1 shared

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