Approaching Labor through Archaeology in the Twenty-First Century
Other Keywords
Labor •
Memory •
Mining •
Significance •
Capitalism •
Race •
Immigration •
Dna •
Foodways •
African American
Temporal Keywords
20th Century •
Early 20th Century •
19th and 20th Century •
1921 •
19th and 20th centuries •
1880s-present •
19th and early 20th Century •
1870-1950 •
mid-18th to late 19th centuries •
Eighteenth Century to Present
Geographic Keywords
North America •
Coahuila (State / Territory) •
New Mexico (State / Territory) •
Oklahoma (State / Territory) •
Arizona (State / Territory) •
Texas (State / Territory) •
Sonora (State / Territory) •
United States of America (Country) •
Chihuahua (State / Territory) •
Nuevo Leon (State / Territory)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-11 of 11)
- Documents (11)
- All the Yards a Market: Bones of Dissent and the Seed of Reproduction (2015)
- An Archeology of Labor in Practice (2015)
- Assessing the Value and Potential of Labor Archaeology: A Description of the Labor Archaeology of the Industrial Era National Historic Landmark Theme Study (2015)
- Dark Places: Archaeological Investigations of Historic Underground Mines (2015)
- Domestic Labor in Black and Green: Deciphering the Shared experiences of African American and Irish Domestics Working in the same Northern Virginia Households and Communities (2015)
- Everyone Was Black in the Mines: Exploring the Reasons for Relaxed Racial Tensions in Early West Virginia Coal Company Towns. (2015)
- Intersectionality and Labor Solidarity at Blair Mountain (2015)
- The Invisible Institution: Archaeological Expressions of Coerced Labour Control through the Manipulation of Information. (2015)
- Lives Wrought in the Furnace: New Research on the Labor Force at Catoctin Furnace (2015)
- "People in this town had a hard life. We had a hard life": Creating and Re-Creating ‘Patchtown’ History in the Anthracite Region of Northeastern Pennsylvania (2015)
- Who is "Free" Today?: Negotiating the documentary record of labor history for archaeology (2015)