Colonized Bodies, Worlds Transformed: Toward a Global Bioarchaeology of Contact and Colonialism
Colonized Bodies, Worlds Transformed: Toward a Global Bioarchaeology of Contact and Colonialism
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Abstract
Contact between separate human cultures have led to some significant adaptive transitions of humankind, particularly the collision between the Eastern and the Western Hemispheres beginning in A.D. 1492. Still, conquest and colonialism were not understood scientifically, long entwined with incomplete histories and assumptions regarding Native demographic collapse. Bioarchaeological studies of human remains have shed light on contact, including the realization that contact and colonialism were phenomenon not limited to the Columbian exchange. Colonized Bodies, Worlds Transformed delves into bioarchaeology contact through new research of colonial encounters, culture contact, and colonialism from diverse areas. The chapters revolve around key questions: how did contact and colonialism produce dissimilar biocultural outcomes? How did colonialism unfold among regions and peoples not yet well studied, such as far southern South America, Africa, and the Near East? How were the colonizers transformed by these events In what ways did native peoples fight, cope, survive, thrive, or perish in colonial worlds? Fourteen chapters bring together lines of evidence anchored around the human skeleton to demonstrate remarkable variations in the outcome of contact—from twentieth century South America to Dynastic ancient Egypt, South Africa, Mesoamerica, Peru, the Roman world, and the southeast United States. These works provide an initial glimpse of the enduring global footprint of contact and colonialism over the last two thousand years. Colonized Bodies, Worlds Transformed makes the case that the bioarchaeology of contact, though a balanced integration between human biology, paleopathology, mortuary archaeology, history, and social theory, can uncover a previously unknown range of human experiences and histories.
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Front Matter
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1
Transcending Conquest: Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Conquest and Culture Contact for the Twenty-First Century
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I Life, Death, and Mortuary Practices after Contact and Colonialism
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2
Exhuming Differences and Continuities after Colonialism at Puruchuco-Huaquerones, Peru
Melissa S. Murphy and others
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3
New Kingdom Egyptian Colonialism in Nubia at the Third Cataract: A Diachronic Examination of Sociopolitical Transition (1750–650 B.C.)
Michele R. Buzon andStuart Tyson Smith
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4
Escaping Conquest? A First Look at Regional Cultural and Biological Variation in Postcontact Eten, Peru
Haagen D. Klaus andRosabella Alvarez-Calderón
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5
The Social Structuring of Biological Stress in Contact-Era Spanish Florida: A Bioarchaeological Case Study from Santa Catalina de Guale, St. Catherines Island, Georgia
Lauren A. Winkler and others
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2
Exhuming Differences and Continuities after Colonialism at Puruchuco-Huaquerones, Peru
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II Frontiers, Colonial Entanglements, and Diversity
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6
Living on the Edge: Maya Identity and Skeletal Biology on the Spanish Frontier
Amanda R. Harvey and others
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7
Double Coloniality in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina: A Bioarchaeological and Historiographical Approach to Selk’nam Demographics and Health (La Candelaria Mission, Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries)
Ricardo A. Guichón and others
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8
Impacts of Imperial Interests on Health and Economy in the Byzantine Near East
Megan A. Perry
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9
Imperialism and Physiological Stress in Rome, First to Third Centuries A.D.
Kristina Killgrove
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6
Living on the Edge: Maya Identity and Skeletal Biology on the Spanish Frontier
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III The Body and Identity under Colonialism
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10
Survival and Abandonment of Indigenous Head-Shaping Practices in Iberian America after European Contact
Vera Tiesler andPilar Zabala
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11
A Glimpse of the Ancien Régime in the French Colonies? A Consideration of Ancestry and Health at the Moran Site (22HR511), Biloxi, Mississippi
Marie Elaine Danforth and others
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12
Effects of Colonialism from the Perspective of Craniofacial Variation: Comparing Case Studies Involving African Populations
Isabelle Ribot and others
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13
Hybridity? Change? Continuity? Survival? Biodistance and the Identity of Colonial Burials from Magdalena de Cao Viejo, Chicama Valley, Peru
Alejandra Ortiz and others
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14
The Bioarchaeology of Colonialism: Past Perspectives and Future Prospects
Christopher M. Stojanowski
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10
Survival and Abandonment of Indigenous Head-Shaping Practices in Iberian America after European Contact
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End Matter
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