Kandace D. Hollenbach
Specialties
Paleoethnobotany; early and historic foodways of peoples of the eastern United States; gender and identity among hunting-gathering peoples; use of landscape and settlement/mobility strategies of hunting-gathering and horticultural peoples; shift from foraging to food production.
Phone
865-974-1865
Office
408 Strong Hall
Kandace D. Hollenbach
Associate Professor & Associate Head; Associate Curator of Paleoethnobotany, McClung Museum of Natural History & Culture | Anthropological Archaeology
Research
Professional Service
- President, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 2022-2024 Elect, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 2020-2022
- President, Tennessee Council for Professional Archaeology, 2020-2021
- Treasurer, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 2013-2016
- Board Member, Tennessee Council for Professional Archaeology, 2013-2015
Awards and Recognitions
C.B. Moore Award for Excellence in Southeastern Archaeology by a Young Scholar, Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 2012
Publications
Book:
- 2009 Foraging in the Tennessee Valley, 12,500 to 8,000 Years Ago. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.
Recent Publications:
- Hollenbach, K.D. (2023) From Foraging to Farming in East Tennessee. In Archaeology of the Southern Appalachians and Adjacent Watersheds, edited by T.R. Whyte and C.C. Boyd Jr., pp. 176-196. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.
- Hollenbach, K.D. (2023) Late Archaic and Woodland Foodways and Landscapes in Tuckaleechee Cove, East Tennessee. In Ancient Foodways: Integrative Approaches to Understanding Subsistence and Society, ed. by C. M. Scarry, D. Hutchinson, and B. Arbuckle, pp. 211-234. University of Florida Press, Gainesville.
- Hollenbach, K.D., and S.B. Carmody (2022) Stalking the Most Predictable Prey: Early Gatherers in the Eastern Woodlands. In The Paleoindian and Early Archaic Southeast, ed. by D.S. Miller, A. Smallwood, and J. Tune, pp. 230-249. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.
- Hollenbach, K.D., and S.B. Carmody (2022) From Foraging to Farming: Domesticating Landscapes in the Midsouth 3,000 Years Ago. Economic Anthropology 9(2):240-256. doi:10.1002/sea2.12249.
- Simon, M.L., Hollenbach, K.D., & Redmond, B.G. (2021) New Dates and Carbon Isotope Assays of Purported Middle Woodland Maize from the Icehouse Bottom and Edwin Harness Sites. American Antiquity, 1-12. doi:10.1017/aaq.2020.117.
- Johanson, J.L., K.D. Hollenbach, and H.J. Cyr (2020) Food Production in the Early Woodland: Macrobotanical Remains as Evidence for Farming along the Riverbank in Eastern Tennessee. Southeastern Archaeology 39(1):1-15.
- Hollenbach, K.D., and S.B. Carmody (2019) Agricultural Innovation and Dispersal in Eastern North America. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Environmental Science. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
- Carmody, S. B., & Hollenbach, K.D. (2019) Planting Rituals: Woodland Gardens and Imbued Landscapes. In Shaman, Priest, Ritual, Belief, edited by S. B. Carmody, & C. Barrier, University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.
- Carmody, S.B., K.D. Hollenbach, and E.M. Weitzel (2018) Prehistoric Foodways from the Dust Cave Site. In Baking, Bourbon, and Black Drink: Foodways Archaeology in the American Southeast, ed. by T.M. Peres and A. Deter-Wolf, pp. 102-118. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.
- Hollenbach, K.D., and S.B. Carmody (2018) A Taste of the Seasons, or the Daily Lives of Early Archaic Foragers in the Midsouth. In The Archaeology of Everyday Matters, ed. by S. Price and P. Carr, pp. 53-66. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
Education
Ph.D. 2005, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. Dissertation: Gathering in the Late Paleoindian and Early Archaic Periods in the Middle Tennessee River Valley, Northwest Alabama
B.A. 1998, Washington University, St. Louis (summa cum laude)