You are here: 鶹ý College of Arts & Sciences Faculty Daniel Sayers

Back to top

Photograph of Daniel Sayers

Daniel Sayers Associate Professor CAS | ANTH | Anthropology

Additional Positions at AU
Graduate Director, Anthropology
Degrees
PhD, Historical Archaeology, College of William & Mary
MA, Anthropology, Western Michigan University
BA, Philosophy and Anthropology, Western Michigan University

Book Currently Reading
Goldfarb, 2023 Crossings: How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of our Planet
Bio
Dr. Sayers is a historical archaeologist who has worked across the United States on academic and cultural resource management projects during the past 30 years. He has written on a variety of topics in areas of theory, practice, and issues in the profession today as can be found in his two academic books and his many journal articles and edited volume chapters. As a public-facing researcher, Dr. Sayers has appeared on many television and streaming shows, documentary films, podcasts, radio programs, and other media while also presenting to a variety of public audiences several times per year.
For the Media
To request an interview for a news story, call AU Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.

Teaching

Fall 2024

  • ANTH-253 Introduction to Archaeology

  • ANTH-496 Selected Topics:Non-Recurring: Spatial Anthropology

Spring 2025

  • ANTH-253 Introduction to Archaeology

Partnerships & Affiliations


  • Member

  • US Fish and Wildlife Service
    In Partnership

  • Smithsonian National Museum of African 鶹ý History and Culture
    In Partnership

  • Great Dismal Swamp Stakeholder Collaborative
    Member

Scholarly, Creative & Professional Activities

Research Interests

Exploring the following through a political economic perspective:

  • Diasporas and exile
  • Alienation, estrangement, and the material world
  • Labor and commodities
  • Marronage, Maroon communities, and the (so-called) Underground Railroad
  • Farmsteads and rural life
  • Defiance and resistance among the oppressed
  • Animal emancipation/rights and archaeology
  • The Material-existentialaspects of having been, of being, and of becoming
  • Community power
  • Multispecies society
  • Gender,family, and kin
  • Archaeological research modelsand methods (e.g., excavation, survey, and certain modes of data recordation)
  • Homed and unhomed (a.k.a., homeless, unhoused)
  • Race, racism, and racialization
  • The nature of the archaeological record
  • Historical archaeology as a deliberate, strategic, interventionist and world-transformational praxis.

Media Appearances

Recent appearances:

July 2023

Appeared as a collaborative team member in, “Searching for a Fortress Built by People Who Escaped Slavery”, by Matthew Hutson, The New Yorker

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/annals-of-inquiry/searching-for-a-fortress-built-by-people-who-escaped-slavery

May 2023

Appeared as Dismal Swamp archaeology expert and commentator on Indigenous 鶹ý social history in Great Dismal Swamp. In the podcast, Tribal Truths, episode, “Nansemond Indian Nation: Looking for Ancestors in the Great Dismal Swamp”, WVTF, Virginia Public Radio.

https://www.wvtf.org/podcast/tribal-truths/2023-05-25/nansemond-indian-nation-looking-for-ancestors-in-the-great-dismal-swamp

August 2022

鶹ý Landscapes w/ host Baratunde Thurston, PBS, Episode 4 on the Mid-Atlantic; appeared as archaeology expert and interviewee with host in the Dismal Swamp.

February 2022

The Underground Railroad, episode 3 in 4-part series on Discovery Science Channel; appeared as archaeology expert in Dismal Swamp segment.

December 2020

“”,The Virginian-Pilot.

November 2020

.Constant Wonder, Brigham Young University Radio, Podcast interview.

October 2020

What on Earth?, Discovery Science Channel, Dismal Swamp Archaeology segment (original air date 10/22/2020)

Grants and Sponsored Research

NEH "We the People Collaborative Grant; Canon/National Park Service/鶹ý Academy of Arts and Sciences Grant

Films/Documentaries

, Smithsonian Channel, 2018.

Selected Publications

Recent Public Work

Sayers, Dan. 2021, . TedEd short film.

Sayers, Daniel O. 2018, , The Doctor T.J Eckleburg Review.

Sayers, Daniel O., 2017, Guest Columnist, "."

Recent Books

*Sayers, Daniel O. (2023).The Archaeology of the Homed and the Unhomed.Archaeology of the 鶹ý Experience, Michael S. Nassaney and Krysta Ryzewski, series eds., University Press of Florida, Gainesville.

*2023 Choice Outstanding Academic Title Award (鶹ý Library Association)

Sayers, Daniel O. (2014).A Desolate Place for a Defiant People: The Archeology of Maroons, Indigenous 鶹ýs, and Enslaved Laborers in the Great Dismal Swamp. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. (Second, paperback edition, 2016).

Recent Articles and Book Chapters

Sayers, Daniel O. (2023).Some Thoughts on Landscape’s Political-Economic Fissures and Understanding Past Social Radicals.Thematic volume on “Cracks in Capitalism.”, Wurst and Dezsi, eds.International Journal of Historical Archaeology.

Sayers, Daniel O. (2019). The Radical Antebellum Great Dismal Swamp of North Carolina and Virginia, USA: Maroons, Indigenous 鶹ýs, and the Power of Underdeveloped Landscapes.Revue d’histoire du XIXe siècle58:125-146.

Sayers, Daniel O., and Justin Uehlein (2018). Animal Emancipation and Historical Archaeology: A Pairing Long Overdue. In,Critical Animal Studies: Towards Trans-species Social Justice, Atsuko Matsuoka and John Sorenson, eds., pp.117-142, Rowman & Littlefield International, London, UK.

Short Fiction

Daniel Owen Sayers, 2018, ,Poor Yorick Journal

Honors, Awards, and Fellowships

WMU Distinguished Anthropology Alumnus; William and Mary Distinguished Doctoral Dissertation in Social Sciences; Keynote, Great Dismal Swamp NPS Network To Freedom Ceremony

Announcements

*is yielding good results:

**See our Facebook page.

Professional Services

Expert consultant activitiesinclude

  • Jamestown Rediscovery Museum Revamp: Content, Tour Info, and Exhibits
  • USFWS Archaeological Excavation and Architectural Survey Consulting
  • USFWS and NPS Great Dismal Swamp Public History Interpretation Pavilion: Info, Text, and Images
  • Smithsonian National Museum of African 鶹ý History and Culture (National Mall, Washington DC): Exhibit development and content, facilitation of artifact loans

Examples of courses developed and taught include

  • Grad: Craft of Anthropology; Foundations of Archaeology: Marxism, Material Culture, and Space; Archaeology, Alienation, and the Existential Condition
  • Grad/Undergrad: Great Depression Undocumented Laborer Project/Delta, PA Archaeological Field School (AU, co-taught); Archaeology of the Homeless and the Home; Radical Archaeologies; humAnimal anthropology
  • Undergrad: Human Origins; Introduction to Archaeology; Early America: The Buried Past