The trope of “tradition” dominates archaeological studies of the African diaspora. Much of the information archaeologists have about traditions on the African continent or in the early diaspora comes from historical documents and from ethnography. Here, the author argues that pragmatism provides a model for analysis that allows archaeology a degree of independence from these allied datasets. Archaeologists, like other social scientists, confront the problem of the relative importance of social learning (i.e., tradition) vs. structure as forces shaping cultural expression in the African diaspora. An analytical strategy inspired by pragmatism is here applied to beads recovered from Tidewater Chesapeake slave quarters occupied in the 18th and ...
(From “Chapter 1: Introduction.” No abstract available.) The archaeology of the African Diaspora ho...
East Africa is known the world over for its extensive contribution to the history of humankind espec...
I use W.E.B. Du Bois\u27 reference to the worlds \u27within and without the veil\u27 as the narrativ...
The trope of “tradition” dominates archaeological studies of the African diaspora. Much of the infor...
This paper discusses models of ethnoarchaeology. The crucial consideration should be an orientation ...
Archaeological studies at sites of enslaved Africans and African-Americans have been intensely under...
A rich body of thought—developed by archaeologists and others—points the way toward dynamic understa...
Though there is no shortage of 17th century plantation sites in the Chesapeake archaeology enslaved ...
“Ethnography as tradition in Africa” is our way of stressing that our discipline’s favoured methodol...
Discusses archaeology's contribution to the historiography of Africa and its effect in changing atti...
The connections of the Pharaonic civilisation with Nilotic and Sub-Saharan African cultures are in d...
What has frequently been termed contact-period archaeology has assumed a prominent role in North A...
This article interrogates the development of African diaspora studies. Based a global research proj...
Scholarly archaeological research into the African diaspora in Atlantic Canada is quite limited to d...
Africa is the second-largest continent in the world (after Asia), making up around one-fifth of the ...
(From “Chapter 1: Introduction.” No abstract available.) The archaeology of the African Diaspora ho...
East Africa is known the world over for its extensive contribution to the history of humankind espec...
I use W.E.B. Du Bois\u27 reference to the worlds \u27within and without the veil\u27 as the narrativ...
The trope of “tradition” dominates archaeological studies of the African diaspora. Much of the infor...
This paper discusses models of ethnoarchaeology. The crucial consideration should be an orientation ...
Archaeological studies at sites of enslaved Africans and African-Americans have been intensely under...
A rich body of thought—developed by archaeologists and others—points the way toward dynamic understa...
Though there is no shortage of 17th century plantation sites in the Chesapeake archaeology enslaved ...
“Ethnography as tradition in Africa” is our way of stressing that our discipline’s favoured methodol...
Discusses archaeology's contribution to the historiography of Africa and its effect in changing atti...
The connections of the Pharaonic civilisation with Nilotic and Sub-Saharan African cultures are in d...
What has frequently been termed contact-period archaeology has assumed a prominent role in North A...
This article interrogates the development of African diaspora studies. Based a global research proj...
Scholarly archaeological research into the African diaspora in Atlantic Canada is quite limited to d...
Africa is the second-largest continent in the world (after Asia), making up around one-fifth of the ...
(From “Chapter 1: Introduction.” No abstract available.) The archaeology of the African Diaspora ho...
East Africa is known the world over for its extensive contribution to the history of humankind espec...
I use W.E.B. Du Bois\u27 reference to the worlds \u27within and without the veil\u27 as the narrativ...