Rich with the objects of the day-to-day lives of illiterate or common people in the southeastern United States, this book offers an archaeological reevaluation of history itself: where it is, what it is, and how it came to be. Through clothing, cooking, eating, tool making, and other mundane forms of social expression and production, traditions were altered daily in encounters between missionaries and natives, between planters and slaves, and between native leaders and native followers. As this work demonstrates, these "unwritten texts" proved to be potent ingredients in the larger-scale social and political events that shaped how peoples, cultures, and institutions came into being. These developments point to a common social process whereb...
What has frequently been termed contact-period archaeology has assumed a prominent role in North A...
A new paradigm is emerging in archaeology herein dubbed ‘historical processualism’. A review of thre...
Interpreting Mississippian Period iconography has been an ongoing process for the last five hundred ...
This volume uses case studies to capture the recent emphasis on history in archaeological reconstruc...
Though there is no shortage of 17th century plantation sites in the Chesapeake archaeology enslaved ...
Presenting a case study of an American Indian exhibit at the Funk Heritage Center, I critically exam...
[Extract] In this chapter I want to contribute to an anthropological understanding of human agency b...
Decolonizing “Prehistory” combines a critical investigation of the documentation of the American dee...
This thesis investigates ethnohistoric accounts written about Southeastern Native Americans and thei...
Kowal\u27s dissertation, entitled The Affinities and Disparities within: Community and Status of the...
This paper is an effort to study and analyze some of the culture objects of the early American India...
In the last four decades, southeastern archaeology has increasingly developed a processual method of...
A review of Archaeology of the Lower Muskogee Creek Indians, 1715-1836, by H. Thomas Foster II
This work explores how people forge cultural identities through the active process of creolization a...
Although Sahlins proposed it over thirty years ago, and notwithstanding various noteworthy contribut...
What has frequently been termed contact-period archaeology has assumed a prominent role in North A...
A new paradigm is emerging in archaeology herein dubbed ‘historical processualism’. A review of thre...
Interpreting Mississippian Period iconography has been an ongoing process for the last five hundred ...
This volume uses case studies to capture the recent emphasis on history in archaeological reconstruc...
Though there is no shortage of 17th century plantation sites in the Chesapeake archaeology enslaved ...
Presenting a case study of an American Indian exhibit at the Funk Heritage Center, I critically exam...
[Extract] In this chapter I want to contribute to an anthropological understanding of human agency b...
Decolonizing “Prehistory” combines a critical investigation of the documentation of the American dee...
This thesis investigates ethnohistoric accounts written about Southeastern Native Americans and thei...
Kowal\u27s dissertation, entitled The Affinities and Disparities within: Community and Status of the...
This paper is an effort to study and analyze some of the culture objects of the early American India...
In the last four decades, southeastern archaeology has increasingly developed a processual method of...
A review of Archaeology of the Lower Muskogee Creek Indians, 1715-1836, by H. Thomas Foster II
This work explores how people forge cultural identities through the active process of creolization a...
Although Sahlins proposed it over thirty years ago, and notwithstanding various noteworthy contribut...
What has frequently been termed contact-period archaeology has assumed a prominent role in North A...
A new paradigm is emerging in archaeology herein dubbed ‘historical processualism’. A review of thre...
Interpreting Mississippian Period iconography has been an ongoing process for the last five hundred ...