Breaking Boundaries: Exploring Colonialism in the Modern World and Beyond
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Over the last three decades, the archaeology of colonialism has reached a period of maturity under the direction of a generation of established scholars. The resulting knowledge and discussions have impacted the theoretical, political, and methodological landscape of archaeological practices and have opened up new avenues for comparative work within the field. However, much of this work has remained focused on discrete contexts associated with the "modern" world or with a particular set of "settler colonialist" encounters. This session seeks to explore whether the impacts of "colonialism" as a lens for archaeological analysis holds utility beyond such contexts. Specifically, we invite speakers to explore the potential applicability of the framework within diverse geographical, temporal, and social contexts that fall outside the traditionally delineated boundaries of colonial relations. The goal is not to propose a unified and unproblematic method of analysis; rather, it is an attempt to recover an intra-disciplinary dialogue, among at times disparate sections of the archaeological endeavor, centered on a common conceptual framework. In so doing we hope to highlight both the potential and limitations of applying the lens of colonialism to the archaeological record, but more importantly the common ground that creates archaeology with a "capital A."
Other Keywords
Colonialism •
Colonization •
Ireland •
Britain •
Fur Trade •
Theory •
Race •
Emancipation •
Caribbean •
Interdisciplinary
Geographic Keywords
Europe •
North America - Midwest •
South America •
Caribbean •
North America - Northeast
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Beyond Romanization and Colonialism: Roman Influences in Ireland (2016)
- Castles and Colonialism: Exploring Meaning in Historic Irish Archaeology (2016)
- Colonial process in the Portuguese America: Tupi settlement at the Brazilian Southern shore (2016)
- Colonization or Migration? Applying colonial theory to Post-Roman Britain (2016)
- Colonizing Yourself: The British colonization of Britain (2016)
- The Eighteenth-century Fur Trade: A Colonial Endeavor? (2016)
- Entangling Mississippian Identities: A case for postcolonial theory in the Upper Mississippian world (2016)
- A theory on cultural inversion: resistance, resilience and agency within the archaeology of colonialism (2016)
- The Value of Colonialism as a Model for Anglo-Caribbean Material Practices at Emancipation (2016)
- Why Classics Needs Anthropology (2016)