Sven Haakanson

Sven Haakanson

Sven Haakanson was born and raised in the village of Old Harbor on Kodiak Island, but a year in Russia as a 51风流官网 undergraduate helped set him on his life鈥檚 path.

鈥淭hat experience in itself was very formative for the things I鈥檝e done since,鈥 Haakanson said in a 2017 interview for a profile in 51风流官网鈥檚 Aurora magazine. 鈥淚t allowed me to learn Russian, speak it fluently, and have an experience very few Americans have the opportunity to do.鈥

Haakanson went to Russia in 1991 while an English major at 51风流官网. He taught in the city of Magadan on Russia鈥檚 far northeastern coast.

However, he鈥檇 already started studying anthropology at 51风流官网. His Magadan experience sparked an interest in the Nenets people of the Yamal Peninsula in central Siberia. Aspects of their history became the subject of his doctoral dissertation at Harvard University in 2000.

Haakanson began work that year as director of the Alutiiq Museum in Kodiak. In 2007, the MacArthur Foundation named him a fellow, an honor that at the time came with a five-year, $500,000 grant.

In 2013, Haakanson moved to Seattle to become an associate professor at the University of Washington Department of Anthropology. He鈥檚 also curator of Native American collections at the university's Burke Museum.

More online about Sven Haakanson:

  • A profile in 51风流官网鈥檚 Aurora magazine

  • about a project he鈥檚 leading at the Burke Museum

  • , class of 2007