
Contents
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Beginnings Beginnings
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Excavating Californio Ethnogenesis Excavating Californio Ethnogenesis
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Ethnogenesis Archaeology, Ten Years Later Ethnogenesis Archaeology, Ten Years Later
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New Perspectives on Californio Ethnogenesis New Perspectives on Californio Ethnogenesis
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Reanalysis Reanalysis
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New Investigations New Investigations
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Practical Effects Practical Effects
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Publics Publics
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Heritage Dialogues Heritage Dialogues
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Pasts and Futures Pasts and Futures
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References Cited References Cited
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Cite
Extract
In the years following the publication of The Archaeology of Ethnogenesis: Race and Sexuality in Colonial San Francisco, archaeologists’ engagement with questions of identity formation—including ethnogenesis—has exploded. The University Press of Florida’s release of this new paperback and e-book edition provides an opportunity to reflect on the research presented in this book and on what Weik (personal communication 2014) has termed the “massive identity discourse” that structures much archaeological research today. Both archaeology and ethnogenesis are ongoing processes. Here, I discuss new findings from recent archaeological research initiatives, as well as the ways that this book has become part of public conversations about identities past and present.
Beginnings
The Archaeology of Ethnogenesis arose out of ongoing research that I and many others have been conducting at the site of El Presidio de San Francisco, Spain’s northernmost military outpost in the Americas. Preparing for this new edition has brought me back to the earliest days of my research there, when the Presidio of San Francisco National Historic Landmark District was still an active U.S. Army post. I began work at the Presidio in 1992 as an archaeological monitor for infrastructure upgrades and environmental remediation projects being undertaken by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. My first assignment, as discussed in chapter 5, was to observe construction and environmental excavations in archaeologically sensitive areas.
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