Maximilian Viatori

Education:
BA, Anthropology & Classical Studies (Magna cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa), University of Missouri, Columbia
PhD, Anthropology, University of California, Davis
Position:
Department Head & Professor
Contact:
Email: mviatori@mun.ca
Phone: (709) 864-8860
Office: Queen's College, QC4027
Research Interests:
I have conducted ethnographic and archival research on inequality, racism, governance, knowledge, and political ecology since 2001. Much of my work has explored how neoliberalized ideas about citizenship, the market, and the environment have become integrated into day-to-day life in ways that perpetuate enduring inequalities. My early research projects focused on the politics of national belonging, linguistic diversity, and rights activism in Ecuador. More recently, my work has focused on the intersections of social inequality and climate change, particularly in coastal Peru. My latest book, The Unequal Ocean, reveals how prevailing representations of the ocean obscure racialized disparities and the ways that different people experience the impacts of the climate crisis. My current research project examines different aspects of the 渂lue economy in Peru and throughout the eastern Pacific Ocean to assess how an emergent nexus of ocean conservation and extraction is inscribing new frontiers in ocean zones previously considered socially and geographically 渕arginal.
I welcome any undergraduate and graduate students who are interested in doing honours or thesis projects on any of these topics or related issues to contact me.
Selected Publications
BOOKS
Peer-Reviewed Books
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. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2023
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. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2019. *with He虂ctor Bombiella

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. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Press, 2010.
Articles (for a full list please follow the )
- 淪aving the Costa Verde's Waves: Surfing and Discourses of Race揅lass in the Enactment of Lima's Coastal Infrastructure (with Brandon Scheuring). Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 25(1): 84-103. 2020
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淯ncertain Risks: Salmon Science, Harm, and Ignorance in Canada. American Anthropologist 121(2):325-337. 2019
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淧ublic Secrets, Muzzled Science: Agnotological Practice, State Performance, and Dying Salmon in British Columbia. Political and Legal Anthropology Review 39(S1):89-103. 2016
- 淩upture and the Maintenance of Indigenous Alterity: Crises, Borders, and Race in Ecuador, 19412008. Ethnohistory 63(3):497-518. 2016
- 淒efending White-Mestizo Invisibility through the Production of Indigenous Alterity: (Un)Marking Race in Ecuador檚 Mainstream Press.
Anthropological Quarterly89(2): 483-512. 2016