- Department, Office, or School
- Department of Anthropology
- Associate Professor
- emailaallard@ric.edu
- phone401-456-8005
- location_onGaige Hall
Education
Postdoctoral Fellow, Royal Ontario Museum, 2017-2019 (funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada)
Ph.D., University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Campus, 2016, Anthropology
M.A., University of Massachusetts Boston, 2010, Historical Archaeology
B.A., Universit茅 Laval, 2007, Archaeology
B.A., Universit茅 du Qu茅bec 脿 Montr茅al (UQ脌M), Communication Studies, Multimedia minor, 2004
Selected Publications
In review Am茅lie Allard and Craig Cipolla, 鈥淔ailure and Colonialism: The View from a Riverine Assemblage,鈥 submitted for review to Historical Archaeology, December 14th 2018.
2020 Am茅lie Allard, 鈥淩elationships, Responsibility, and the Creation of Colonial Landscapes in the Eighteenth-Century Fur Trade,鈥 American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 44, Issue 2 (pages forthcoming).
2018 Cipolla, Craig N. and Am茅lie Allard, 鈥淩ecognizing River Power: Watery Views of Ontario's Fur Trade,鈥 Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, volume number forthcoming. Available online .
2018 Am茅lie Allard, 鈥淐ommunities, Survivance and Acts of 鈥楻esidence鈥 in the Late Eighteenth-Century Fur Trade in Minnesota,鈥 in Indian Culture and European Trade Goods: 50 Years of Insight on Midwest Historical Archaeology, H. Walder and J. Yann (editors). Midwest Archaeological Conference Occasional Papers No. 2: 67-86.
2018 Am茅lie Allard, 鈥淕endered Mobilities: Performing Masculinities in the Late Eighteenth-century Mobile Fur Trade Community.鈥 Ethnohistory 65(1): 75-99.
2018 Am茅lie Allard, 鈥淟es marchands-voyageurs: une communaut茅 en movement,鈥 础谤肠丑茅辞濒辞驳颈辩耻别蝉 31: 23-38.
2015 Am茅lie Allard, 鈥淔oodways, Commensality and Nipmuc Identity: An Analysis of Faunal Remains From Sarah Boston鈥檚 Farmstead, Grafton, MA, 1790-1840,鈥 International Journal of Historical Archaeology 19(1): 208-231.
Courses
ANTH 102: Introduction to Archaeology
ANTH 235: Bones and Stones - How Archaeologists Know
ANTH 338: Urban Anthropology
ANTH 266: Anthropological and Indigenous Perspectives on Place
FYS 100: From Star Trek to Star Wars: Understanding Your World Through Science Fiction
Expertise & Research Interests
Areas of Expertise
Historical archaeology
Indigenous archaeology
French and British colonialism
Identity politics
Faunal analysis
Great Lakes and Northeast archaeology
Research Interests
Dr. Allard鈥檚 research and teaching have drawn from the archaeological study of French and British colonialism in North America, in particular how colonists and Indigenous peoples interacted with each other, in particular when the colonists were venturing into unfamiliar landscapes. In a world where uprootedness, migration and displacement are increasingly part of people鈥檚 lived experiences at an unprecedented global scale, her work broadly addresses the issues of how mobility has affected communities in the past, especially how it affected their senses of place and of identification with others while they navigated new and foreign environments. Thus far Dr. Allard has pursued such questions as they relate to the highly mobile world of the eighteenth-century fur trade in the Great Lakes region of North America as a case study to understand the way diasporic, immigrant, merchant and/or Indigenous communities accommodated, negotiated, challenged, and altered social and physical landscapes. Given her focus on the last two hundred years, she seeks to better understand how these processes worked in colonial contexts, where intercultural encounters influenced social relations as well as the nature of interactions between people and the environment. Her analysis of existing fur trade collections at the Royal Ontario Museum has led her to expand upon the issues outlined above and give greater consideration to the power of rivers and other non-human forces in the entanglement between mobility and human histories.