Melissa Nelson is the faculty advisor to undergraduate majors in the Department of
Anthropology at the University of North Texas. In 2001, she received a B.S. from Emory
University in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology, an interdisciplinary degree that
combined anthropology, biology, psychology, and neuroscience. In 2004, she earned
an M.A. with Distinction in Anthropology at the University of Manchester (UK). Her
thesis analyzed the commodification of authenticity of the Scottish kilt fueled by
diasporic negotiations over identity. Her second M.A. was awarded in 2008 at the University
of Virginia where she also garnered recognition for her teaching from the Seven Society.
At UVa, her research on the return migration experience of Greek women again brought
into question the politics of negotiated identities. Questions over how identity is
defined, claimed, and contested connect her research with her personal experiences
as part of the Nicaraguan and Mexican diasporas in the U.S. In her approach to teaching,
she strives to bring complexity to how we see ourselves and others. She was the recipient
of the 2021 Adjunct Award for Teaching Excellence, the 2022 UCAN Award for Outstanding
Faculty Advisor at the University of North Texas, and the 2023 NACADA Excellence in
Advising award in the Faculty Advisor role for Region 7. Since 2014 she has taught
undergraduate classes at UNT on a diversity of topics ranging from ethnographic field
methods to Foucault and social media culture.
Click here to learn more about advising with Professor Nelson.
Faculty Mentor
PADAWAN Society, Since 2018
Anthropology CLASS Ambassadors, Since 2018
Anthropology Undergraduate Community Coordinator (UCC), Since 2023
BIPOC Collective, Since 2022
Languages Spoken
Spanish
English
Beginning Conversational Greek