Historical Archaeology in the Caribbean: New Directions and Current Perspectives

Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014

In a conference dedicated to reviving ‘questions that count,’ this symposium is a forum to revive previous questions and formulate new ones in inter- and intra-island contexts across the Caribbean. All parts of the Caribbean were shaped by the same forces, among the most prominent of which are race-based slavery, sugar, capitalism, and the tropical and sometimes deadly natural environment. But within these commonalities there is also a great deal of diversity. Different crops, such as cotton, coffee, or indigo create different social and economic environments, and each island has a unique history which influences daily life and political and social developments. In the last three decades, archaeologists have incorporated the latest theoretical and analytical trends to explore this diversity, studying enslaved populations in urban, military, and plantation contexts, but also the lives of indentured servants and free people of color.


Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-20 of 20)

  • Documents (20)

Documents
  1. At the Margins of the Plantation: An Archaeology of the ‘Poor Whites’ of Barbados (2014)
  2. Beyond Sugar: Rethinking Caribbean Plantation Landscapes (2014)
  3. Blue Caribbean: A Possible Indigo Plantation, Great Camanoe Island, British Virgin Islands (2014)
  4. Contesting Identities on an Emancipation Era Barbadian Plantation (2014)
  5. Fieldwork and Footprints: Identifying Former Slave Villages on the Island of St. Eustatius (2014)
  6. Fishing and foraging strategies among enslaved children at Stewart Castle, Jamaica (2014)
  7. From Cane to Provisions: Spatial Organization of Cultivation and Processing on Jamaican Sugar Estates (2014)
  8. Habitation sucrerie et sources archéologiques : le Château Dubuc en Martinique (2014)
  9. Military and Material Life in the British Caribbean: Historical Archaeology of Fort Rocky, Kingston Harbor, Jamaica (ca. 1880-1945) (2014)
  10. Military Sites and Social History: The Fort Charles Archaeological Project in Nevis, West Indies (2014)
  11. Negotiating Transnational Identity in Post-Revolutionary Hispaniola (2014)
  12. People’s Collection Wales and the Great Gale of October 1859 (2014)
  13. Potato Hill, Montserrat: The Role of Multi-Method Survey in Caribbean Historical Archaeology (2014)
  14. Recreating Betty’s Hope Sugar Plantation Through Geographic Information System (GIS) (2014)
  15. Rethinking the Slave Village: A New Perspective on Slave Housing in Early 19th Century Jamaica (2014)
  16. The Role of Caves and Gullies in the Creation of Community Networks Among Enslaved Workers in Barbados (2014)
  17. Scales of production and exchange for Afro Caribbean wares from slave villages on Nevis and St Kitts (2014)
  18. Small Scale Farming to Large Scale Sugar Production, Capitalism, and Slavery in Barbados (2014)
  19. Social and Spatial Dimensions of a Pre-emancipation Village: Preliminary Analysis of Material Culture at Morgan’s Village, Nevis, West Indies (2014)
  20. Unexpected Results for X-Ray Fluorescence Applications in Zooarchaeological Research (2014)