Archaeological Approaches to Subjectification
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 80th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA (2015)
This symposium explores archaeological approaches to subjectification: the practices whereby people recognize authority and recognize themselves as subjects to authority. Archaeology can offer a novel perspective on subjectification because it is uniquely positioned to document the places and things (and their attendant practices) that, over time, manifest claims to identity, underline social boundaries, or undermine a political regime's claim to authority. But even though places and things are mainstays of the archaeological analytic, few archaeologists examine the roles that these materials have played in practices of subjectification. Papers in this symposium draw on recent archaeological data to discuss the contexts in which places and things, in both ancient and modern worlds, became powerful vectors of subjectification that authorized a person's actions, positioned people within social hierarchies, or defined what it means to be a kind of person. These papers contribute an archaeological perspective to contemporary theories that describe subjectification as a continual process by which social differences between authorities and subjects are created, reproduced, or fractured in particular settings and circumstances. The symposium therefore provides theoretical and methodological insights into how archaeologists might understand the political processes, everyday practices, and moments of crisis during which objects shape subjects.
Other Keywords
Materiality •
andes •
Historical Archaeology •
Colonialism •
Political subjectivity •
Subjectivity •
Subjectification •
Power •
Religion •
Slavery
Geographic Keywords
South America •
Mesoamerica •
AFRICA •
Caribbean •
North America - Midwest •
North America - NW Coast/Alaska •
North America - California •
North America - Southeast •
West Asia •
North America - Mid-Atlantic
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-13 of 13)
- Documents (13)
- The Archaeology of First Generation Japanese American Men at an Idaho WWII Internment Camp (2015)
- Blocks, Bricks, and Material Practices of Inter-Subjectification at La Venta, Mexico (2015)
- Defining and divining the healthy body: materialities of body and wellness in the 18th century Spanish New World (2015)
- Drinking power: Moche tombs as sites of subjectification (2015)
- The Earthly Production of Fleshy Subjects in the South-Central Andes (2015)
- Gardens and Forking Paths: A Genealogy of Landscape and Subject Formation in the Zaña Valley, Peru (2015)
- Killing Time, Becoming Inca: Subject Creation and Monument Construction in Ancient Cuzco (2015)
- The Negotiation of Political Subjectivity in the Neo-Assyrian Empire (2015)
- Religious Subjects and Gendered Transformations at the Native American City of Cahokia (2015)
- The spirit of Wye House (2015)
- Subjectification and the Archaeology of Violence: The 19th century Anti-Chinese Movement in San Jose, California (2015)
- Water, Hospitality and Difference in Everyday Life (2015)
- What’s an (Archaeological) Peasant? Notes on Rural Subjectivities in Atlantic Africa (2015)