Mapping and Historical Archaeology: Beyond (within, through) the Grid
Editat de Alanna L. Warner-Smith, Sarah E. Platten Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 iul 2024
This book explores the intersections of mapping and historical archaeology and the ways in which mapping can generate new archaeological data and contribute to methodological and theoretical problems in historical archaeology. The chapters engage with diverse material remains—from travel writing to newspaper reports and colonial records to maps themselves—and also contemporary medical supplies, the architectural ruins along the Silk Road, nineteenth-century foundations in a company town, brick rubble, contemporary city landscapes, and ceramics. There are four key themes explored in the book: the interplay between invisibility and visibility; the visualization of embodied experiences; the use of maps to elucidate and problematize power and resistance, and the emancipatory potentials of mapping within the context of heritage practices and community collaboration. This book is of interest to students and researchers in historical archaeology and anthropology.
Previously published in International Journal of Historical Archaeology Volume 24, issue 4, December 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789819920068
ISBN-10: 981992006X
Ilustrații: V, 254 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore
ISBN-10: 981992006X
Ilustrații: V, 254 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore
Cuprins
The Future is Now: Archaeology and the Eradication of Anti-Blackness.- Mapping the GIS Landscape: Introducing “Beyond (within, through) the Grid”.- Interpreting West Ashcom: Drones, Artifacts, and Archives.- Finding the Spaces Betwixt and Between: GIS of the 1733 St. Jan Slave Rebellion.- Scales of Suffering in the US-Mexico Borderlands.- Moving Subjects, Situated Memory: Thinking and Seeing Medieval Travel on the Silk Road.- “Views from Somewhere”: Mapping Nineteenth-Century Cholera Narratives.- Mapping Difference in the “Uniform” Workers’ Cottages of Maria Island, Tasmania.- “Beyond” the Grid of Labor Control: Salvaged, Persisting, and Leaky Assemblages in Colonial Guatemala.- Stories from North of Main: Neighborhood Heritage Story Mapping.- Digital Archaeology and the Living Cherokee Landscape.-Urban Dialectics, Misrememberings, and Memory-Work: The Halsey Map of Charleston, South Carolina.
Notă biografică
Alanna Warner-Smith is a Peter Buck Postdoctoral Fellow at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. As a historical bioarchaeologist, she draws upon skeletal, archival, and material traces to understand lived experiences in the past. Broadly, her research examines how macroscalar processes and phenomena—such as inequality, immigration, capitalism, urbanization, and industrialization—are experienced and embodied on the ground. She has contributed to research on the Spring Street Presbyterian Church in New York City, New York, and the Mountain Meadows Massacre in Utah. She has also followed the path of a cholera epidemic that moved through the Caribbean in the 1850s. Her current research explores the intersections of health, labor, and citizenship through the embodied experiences of Irish immigrants living and dying in New York City in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This work includes attention to the "postmortem lives" of immigrants, as she studies the collection, curation, and research of the remains of immigrants in the history of biological anthropology.
Sarah E. Platt is an anthropologically informed historical archaeologist and an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the College of Charleston. Her area of study is the urban South, focusing on the archaeology of downtown Charleston, South Carolina using predominantly collections-based methodologies. Broadly, she is interested in how memory and Lost Cause perceptions of the Southern past impact the "archaeological archive" and the collections repository. In the face of the ongoing collections crisis in archaeology, where the production of collections outstrips the resources available to store and care for them, she is also invested in creative uses of pre-existing legacy collections and applying new research questions to old sites.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
This book explores the intersections of mapping and historical archaeology and the ways in which mapping can generate new archaeological data and contribute to methodological and theoretical problems in historical archaeology. The chapters engage with diverse material remains—from travel writing to newspaper reports and colonial records to maps themselves—and also contemporary medical supplies, the architectural ruins along the Silk Road, nineteenth-century foundations in a company town, brick rubble, contemporary city landscapes, and ceramics. There are four key themes explored in the book: the interplay between invisibility and visibility; the visualization of embodied experiences; the use of maps to elucidate and problematize power and resistance, and the emancipatory potentials of mapping within the context of heritage practices and community collaboration. This book is of interest to students and researchers in historical archaeology and anthropology.
Previously published as a special issue in the Journal: International Journal of Historical Archaeology "Includes a Special Issue on Beyond (within, through) the Grid: Mapping and Historical Archaeology".
Caracteristici
Explores the intersections of mapping and historical archaeology Engages with a diverse range of material remains as part of the analysis demonstrated in the chapters Examines how mapping generates new data and addresses methodological and theoretical concerns in historical archaeology