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Bula Wayessa

Professor (History, heritage and archaeology)

Minneapolis, USA

Bula S. Wayessa holds the position of assistant professor within the African American & African Studies Department at the University of Minnesota. Additionally, he serves as an Affiliate Faculty in the Department of Anthropology. His academic pursuits revolve around exploring topics such as social identity, mobility, ontology, and agrarian change.

Publications

  • The Technical Style of Wallaga Pottery Making: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Oromo Potters in Southwest Highland Ethiopia
  • Whose development? The dilemma of rural artisan women in southwestern Ethiopia
  • They deceived us: Narratives of Addis Ababa development-induced displaced peasants
  • We are not alone: conceptualizing people-things relationship in Oromo community in North America.
  • Socio-economic Status of Handicraft Women Among Macca Oromo of West Wallaga, Southwest Ethiopia
  • “Say let it be spared from eyes for a ware cannot survive eyes:” Personification of pots among Oromo of Wallagga, Ethiopia
  • Socialization, Symbolism, and Structures: Aspects of Traditional Pottery Making among the Jimma Oromo, Western Oromia
  • “I have to Resemble My Ancestors through Modification of Midline Diastema”: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Dental Modification among Karrayyu Oromo, Central Ethiopia
  • Why the annual ritual ceremony of Ethiopia’s Oromo is a symbol of indigenous resurgence in Africa.
  • The Globalisation of Teff: implications for Ethiopia.
  • Anchote(Coccinia abyssinica): A Tuber Viewed as a Relative of Women in the Wallaga Region of Southwestern Ethiopia
  • An ethnographic study of traditional pottery making, artisan women, and tuber crop consumption technology in Wallaga, Oromia, Ethiopia.
  • Maekelawi becomes a museum while Kumsa Moroda Palace Museum turns into a Detention center
  • EARTH: The Dynamics of Non-Industrial Agriculture: 8,000 Years of Resilience and Innovation
  • Buna Qalaa: A Quest for Traditional Uses of Coffee Among Oromo People with Special Emphasis on Wallaga, Ethiopia
  • Homeland politics, imagined homeland, and the formation of Oromo diaspora identity
  • Prepared in pots, served in plastics: Rural Ethiopian women’s responses to the global economy
  • ‘No one remains living in the past’: the dynamics of pottery technological styles in southwestern Ethiopia
  • Sweeteners are not always sweet: the social and economic consequences of the growing demand for sugar in Ethiopia
  • Ethnoarchaeological Study of Brewing Technology in Wallaga Region of Western Oromia, Ethiopia
  • Toward a history of the Oromo of Wallaga in southwestern Ethiopia: an ethnoarchaeological study of ceramic technological style and tuber crop domestication.
  • Mother Earth is for us all: the discontent of Oromo pottery-making women at land dispossession in Southwest Oromia, Ethiopia
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  • 2020SG11 Project metadata file
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Bula Wayessa's public data