Labor and Plurality: Excavating the Political Economy of Identity
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
Historical archaeology is celebrated as a means to recover history’s under-represented people, and many base their contributions on our ability to give voice to the poor and the marginal. This worthy endeavor nevertheless rests on a soft foundation. To speak about the unspoken, archaeologists rely on an ability to work from spaces and sites that isolate marginal communities, so that the recovered archaeological remains can be confidently attributed to them. In exchange for this clarity, archaeologists tend to ignore other spaces and sites, and thus leave the diverse record of marginal people incomplete. We also lose an ability to observe direct interactions across the lines of race, class, and gender at the very intimate scales of site and home. Papers in this session employ labor relations as a means to construct alternative approaches to understanding the way identities emerge and develop through the productive processes of work, exchange, and debt.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Changing Systems of Labor and the (Re)Production of Identity (2014)
- Consuming Marginality: Archaeologies of Identity and Post-Segregation Authenticity (2014)
- Labor, settlement, and race: Investigating ‘Plural’ Sites in Eastern Long Island, NY (2014)
- Laboring under an illusion: steps to align method with theory in the archaeology of race (2014)
- Markers of Difference or Makers of Difference?: Approaches to Atypical Practices on Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Sites (2014)
- Modernity and Community Change in Lattimer No. 2: the American 20th Century seen through the archaeology of a Pennsylvania Anthracite shanty town (2014)
- Pluralism and Labor in Overseas Chinese Railroad Camps (2014)
- Reconnecting liminal spaces of labor in the northeast (2014)
- Techniques of Power and Archaeologies of the Contemporary Past (2014)
- Tied to Land, Still at Sea: 19th century African American Whalers and Households in Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island (2014)