Seeing Migrant and Diaspora Communities Archaeologically: Beyond the Cultural Fixity/Fluidity Binary
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 88th Annual Meeting, Portland, OR (2023)
This collection contains the abstracts of the papers presented in the session entitled "Seeing Migrant and Diaspora Communities Archaeologically: Beyond the Cultural Fixity/Fluidity Binary" at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.
How do we “see” migrant and diaspora communities archaeologically over different time scales? We revisit an old debate over the tendency for archaeologists to approach this question as a binary: (1) by interpreting materials associated with migrant and diaspora communities as culturally distinguishable and distinct or (2) by interpreting materials associated with migrant and diaspora communities as unique cultural hybrids, shaped by both places of origin and present contexts. In relying on interpretive methodologies that are static and cyclical, resulting narratives often focus on a set of culturally determined material traits that overshadow the long-term, complex social processes that distinguish different communities. We ask participants in this session to critically examine and discuss the methodological assumptions that they rely on as they do archaeology of migrant and diaspora communities. In turn, we also ask them to discuss approaches that have aided them in breaking this pattern. What archaeological methodologies have allowed them to “see” migrant and diaspora communities and their associated material worlds in a more nuanced way—a way that leaves space for process, continual movement, individual autonomy, multidimensional social identities, and/or dynamic networks of exchange?
Other Keywords
Migration •
Historic •
Historical Archaeology •
Mississippian •
Chronology •
Survey •
Empire •
Colonialism •
Ceramic Analysis •
Household Archaeology
Geographic Keywords
United States of America (Country) •
North America (Continent) •
USA (Country) •
Kentucky (State / Territory) •
Arizona (State / Territory) •
Delaware (State / Territory) •
Georgia (State / Territory) •
Mississippi (State / Territory) •
Tennessee (State / Territory) •
North Carolina (State / Territory)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-14 of 14)
- Documents (14)
- Community Caretaking, Collective Parenting, and Othermothering: Diasporic Family Building in the Western American Military (2023)
- Diaspora on the Block: Neighborhood Archaeology as Theory and Method (2023)
- Diasporic Tensions of Historical Framing and Material Process in Mauritian Archaeology (2023)
- Five Generations at the Stagecoach Inn: A Ruin at the Intersection of Historic Migration(s) in D’Hanis, TX (2023)
- Home, Hearth, and Hammer: Detecting Migrants in the Wari Empire, Peru (2023)
- Migrant and Diaspora Communities in Ancient Kutch and Saurashtra (2023)
- Modeling a Collaborative Archaeological Synthesis of Human Migration for a Long-Term, Global Perspective (2023)
- Moving in New Ways, Making New Places: Novelty and the Politics of Place Making (2023)
- Negotiating the Centrality of Regional Identity in Real Time: Punjabi, Bengali, and NWFP-Ness among Partition Refugees in Delhi (2023)
- Redrawing the Arrows of Mississippianization to and from the Central Illinois River Valley (2023)
- Rethinking Mississippian Migration and Frontier Settlement in Southwest Virginia, USA (2023)
- Seeing Identity within a Carceral Environment: Race and Gender within sites of the Southern Convict Lease System (2023)
- Settled in Strange Lands: Forced Relocation as a Technology of the Inka Empire (2023)
- “Wide-Awake Merchants” and Reform-Minded Women: Archaeology of Alexandria, Virginia’s German Jewish Community (2023)