Archaeology of Identity and Dissonance: Contexts for a Brave New World
Archaeology of Identity and Dissonance: Contexts for a Brave New World
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Abstract
In situations of displacement, disruption, and difference, humans adapt by actively creating, re-creating, and adjusting their identities using the material world. This book employs the discipline of historical archaeology to study this process as it occurs in new and challenging environments. The case studies furnish varied instances of people wresting control from others who wish to define them and of adaptive transformation by people who find themselves in new and strange worlds. The authors consider multiple aspects of identity, such as race, class, gender, and ethnicity, and look for ways to understand its fluid and intersecting nature. The book seeks to make the study of the past relevant to our globalized, postcolonized, and capitalized world. Questions of identity formation are critical in understanding the world today, in which boundaries are simultaneously breaking down and being built up, and humans are constantly adapting to the ever-changing milieu. This book tackles these questions not only in multiple dimensions of earthly space but also in a panorama of historical time. Moving from the ancient past to the unknowable future and through numerous temporal stops in between, the reader travels from New York to the Great Lakes, Britain to North Africa, and the North Atlantic to the West Indies.
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Front Matter
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1
O Brave New World: A Look at Identity and Dissonance
Diane F. George and others
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I People
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2
Cupid’s Bow: Personal Adornment and White Creole Masculinity in Eighteenth-Century Montserrat, West Indies
Jessica Striebel MacLean
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3
The New York Irish: Fashioning Urban Identities in Nineteenth-Century New York City
Meredith B. Linn
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4
Bodies under Scrutiny: Redefining Sex Worker Identity in Early Colonial Algiers
Lisa Geiger
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2
Cupid’s Bow: Personal Adornment and White Creole Masculinity in Eighteenth-Century Montserrat, West Indies
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II Space
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5
Two Houses Windows on the Identity of Chief Richardville
Elizabeth Katherine Spott
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6
“The Little Stairway under the Bell”: Ethnicity, Race, and Class in Antebellum Brooklyn
Marcus Alan Watson
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7
Soldiers on the Wall: Space and Identity on the Romano-British Frontier
Bernice Kurchin andJudith Bianciardi
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5
Two Houses Windows on the Identity of Chief Richardville
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III Place
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8
Constructing Identity in Seneca Village
Diana Dizerega Wall and others
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9
Where Are the Outsiders? A Discussion of Site Identity Formation through a Deconstruction of the Built Environment of Dogtown, Massachusetts
Elizabeth Martin
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10
Agency and Renegotiated Identities in the North Atlantic Isles
Ruth A. Maher andJulie M. Bond
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8
Constructing Identity in Seneca Village
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IV Time
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11
“El Grito de Caguana”: Identity Conflict in Puerto Rico
Rosalina Diaz
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12
“Sacred to the Memory of Washington”: National Identity Formation in Post-Revolutionary New York City
Diane F. George
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13
On Time and Identity: Some Notes toward an Archaeology of the Future
O. Hugo Benavides andBernice Kurchin
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11
“El Grito de Caguana”: Identity Conflict in Puerto Rico
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End Matter
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