David Yetman Explained

David Albert Yetman (born 1941) is an American academic expert on Sonora, Mexico, and an Emmy Award-winning media presenter on the world's deserts. He is a research social scientist at the University of Arizona.

Background

Yetman was born in New Jersey. His father was a minister for the Methodist Church. Following the onset of acute asthma, his family moved with him to the dry climate of southern Arizona when he was a teenager. It arrived in Duncan, Arizona, in 1954 and then moved to Prescott in 1955, where he went to Prescott High School.[1]

Remaining in southern Arizona, he began trading carvings in the 1970s made by the Seri Indians of Sonora, Mexico and began to investigate their livelihoods and culture (Yetman 1988). He also worked in the Chiricahua Mountains. He completed a PhD in philosophy (University of Arizona, 1972). In 1977 he ran for political office and was elected to the Pima County Board of Supervisors as a Democrat, serving until 1988.[2] He used this role to preserve public lands in and around Tucson. He then worked as Executive Director of the Tucson Audubon Society, and then from 1992, joined the University of Arizona’s Southwest Center as Research Social Scientist.

His TV career as host of The Desert Speaks began in 2000, a series lasting 9 years. His PBS series In the Americas with David Yetman began in 2011 and deals with quirky and interesting corners of the Western Hemisphere. As of 2024, ten seasons of ten episodes each have aired and a season 11 is being promoted.

Yetman lives in Tucson.

Contributions

Yetman is a 'voice' for desert regions and their peoples. Like colleagues at the University of Arizona, Gary Nabhan, Tom Sheridan and Joe Wilder, his focus is on the desert regions of south-west USA and Northern Mexico. He specializes in the plants, geography and the lifeways and cultures of the region's indigenous peoples, particularly in northwestern Mexico. By 2010 he estimated he had crossed the US-Mexican border 500 times.[3] His publications date back to the 1980s and often deal with the plant use of particular tribes and peoples.

Books

Media

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Holub H. 2010. David Yetman — Southern Arizona’s ultimate Desert Rat . Tucson Citizen, June 2.
  2. Web site: One Vote Can Tip the Balance: The Battles for Reproductive Care . November 2010 .
  3. Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Sonoran Desert Voices: David Yetman, borderlands scholar, University of Arizona . YouTube.
  4. Web site: Some people really do whistle while they work: Here's why . 15 October 2016 .
  5. Web site: DAVID YETMAN TRAIL tucson.com.