Karen K. Kosasa, Ph.D., Director of the Museum Studies Graduate Certificate Program and Assistant Professor of American Studies (Ph.D. in Visual and Cultural Studies, University of Rochester; M.F.A., University of Hawai‘i) is an educator, cultural critic, and practicing artist. Her teachng and research interests are in visual and material culture with a special focus on issues of representation and critical pedagogy in museums and fine arts institutions. Ms. Kosasa is especially interested in the relationship between museums and minority communities, and recent efforts by museums (in America and abroad) to broaden their educational roles and expand their engagement with non-traditional visitors. Most of her writings examine the relationship between Native and non-Native peoples in settler societies. Her work has been published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art, History of Photography, Art Journal, Art Asia Pacific, and Amerasia, and she is currently working on a manuscript on art pedagogy and settler colonialism. For more biographic information see: www.hawaii.edu/amst/people_kosasa.htm

William R. Chapman, D. Phil., Professor and Director of the Historic Preservation Program (D. Phil, Oxford; M.S., Historic Preservation, (Columbia), is an anthropologist and historic preservationist with considerable research and teaching experience in international preservation. A former Fulbright scholar (Italy, 1985), Chapman has worked in England, the Caribbean, India, and throughout the continental United States. He was formerly Historian, Mid-Atlantic Region, National Park Service, and has received numerous historic preservation awards and recognitions. He is the author of several books and many articles on historic preservation-related topics, which have appeared in the Bulletin of the Association for Preservation Technology, Winterthur Portfolio, Places, Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture, Archaeology, and numerous other journals.For more biographic information see: www.hawaii.edu/amst/people_chapman.htm

For more information on the Historic Preservation Program please go to their website at: www.hawaii.edu/amst/historic.htm

Cooperating Faculty

Ivy Hali‘imaile Andrade, Assistant Professor of Hawaiian Studies

Lynn A. Davis, MLIS, Preservation Librarian
www.hawaii.edu/slis/faculty/

Michael W. Graves, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology
www.anthropology.hawaii.edu/faculty/graves/graves.htm

P. Bion Griffin, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology and Asian Studies, Acting Associate Dean of Social Sciences
www.anthropology.hawaii.edu/faculty/griffin/griffin.htm

Pat Hickman, M.A., Professor of Art
www.hawaii.edu/art/flash/flashmenu.html

Thomas M. Klobe, Professor of Art, Art Gallery Director
www.hawaii.edu/art/flash/flashmenu.html

Barry V. Rolett, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Anthropology
www.anthropology.hawaii.edu/faculty/rolett/rolett.htm

Geoffrey M. White, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology, Senior Fellow at East-West Center
www.anthropology.hawaii.edu/faculty/white/white.htm

Betty Lou Williams, Ph.D., Professor of Art Education
www.hawaii.edu/coe/departments/edcs/edcs_faculty.shtml

Updated 7/19/07