Walter E. Little
Office: Arts & Sciences Building, Room 245
Ph: (518) 442-4718
E-mail: wlittle@albany.edu

Ph.D., University of Illinois, 2001
Interests: Cultural and Ethnic Identity, Cultural Performance, Gender Relations, Marketplace and Household Economics, Transcultural Studies - Tourism, Urban Anthropology.
Areas: Mesoamerica
Curriculum Vitae
Director, Ethnographic Field School in Guatemala
Co-Director, Maya Language School in Guatemala
Co-Founder, Guatemalan Emergency Relief Fund
Research Statement
My research focuses on the socio-economic and political lives of Kaqchikel and K'iche' Maya handicraft vendors. Using a theoretical approach that combines political economy and interpretive perspectives, I am interested in how they use identity instrumentally for political and economic gain, the reasons why individuals and communities compete for tourism and development money by attending to the performative and self-representative mechanisms they employ, and why community continues to be a powerful way for Mayas to organized their economic, political, and social life, given their participation in global economic and cultural markets.
Since 2003, I have studied the politics of Maya spirituality in collaboration with two Kaqchikel Maya ajq’ija’ (daykeepers). In addition, to being Maya spiritual guides, one is a field linguist and the other is a lawyer. Our research looks at the participation in, visibility of, and formalization of Maya spirituality from modern historical, juridical, linguistic, and ethnographic perspectives.
Field Schools
In addition to this research, I run two field schools in Guatemala. One is an Ethnographic Field Methods class, which involves a month of intensive fieldwork on a specific topic. Brochure
The other is the Kaqchikel Maya language and culture class, which I co-direct with Judith Maxwell an anthropological linguist at Tulane University. We combine language instruction and ethnographic field methods. This summer class provides advanced undergraduates and graduate students interested in Mesoamerican archaeology, ethnography, ethnohistory, economic development, and linguistics with an opportunity to acquire skills necessary for conducting research in this region. Brochure, Application Forms
In October 2005, some colleagues and I started a humanitarian aid collective, the Guatemalan Emergency Relief Fund (GFUND) to address the lack of coordination between aid organizations and Guatemalan communities needing assistance, resulting from Hurricane Stan's damage. We help facilitate and foster communication among Maya communities in need of assistance, development and aid organizations, and academic experts.
Select Publications (others)
Books
2006 La ütz awäch? Introduction to the Kaqchikel Maya Language. Austin: University of Texas Press. (With R. McKenna Brown and Judith M. Maxwell).
2004 Mayas in the Marketplace: Tourism, Globalization, and Cultural Identity. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Winner of the New England Council of Latin America Studies
Best Book Prize 2005
Peer Reviewed Articles
2008, Maya Handicraft Vendors, and the Social Re/Construction of Market Spaces in a Tourism Town. Economies and the Transformation of Landscape. SEA, Volume 25. Walnut Creek: Altamira Press.
2005 Getting Organized: Political and Economic Dilemmas for Maya Handicrafts Venders. In W. Little, editor, Special Issue: “Maya Livelihoods in Guatemala’s Global Economy,” Latin American Perspectives 32(5).
2004 In Between Social Movements: Dilemmas of Indigenous Handicrafts Vendors in Guatemala. American Ethnologist. 31(1): 43-59.
2003 Performing Tourism: Maya Women’s Strategies. Special Issue: Development Cultures: New Environments, New Realities, New Strategies. Signs 29(2): 527-532.
2003 Common Origins/“Different” Identities in Two Kaqchikel Maya Towns. Journal of Anthropological Research 59(2): 205-224.
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