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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Neal Ferris (Lawson Chair of Canadian Archaeology, Lawson Chair of Canadian Archaeology, University of Western Ontario) , Rodney Harrison (Reader in Archaeology, Heritage and Museum Studies, Reader in Archaeology, Heritage and Museum Studies, University College London) , Michael V. Wilcox (Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Stanford University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 1.048kg ISBN: 9780199696697ISBN 10: 0199696691 Pages: 528 Publication Date: 27 November 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsList of Contributors Part 1: Ambiguous Definitions and Discordances 1: Rodney Harrison: Shared Histories: Rethinking 'Colonized' and 'Colonizer' in the Archaeology of Colonialism 2: Stephen W. Silliman: Archaeologies of Indigenous Survivance and Residence: Navigating Colonial and Scholarly Dualities 3: Jeff Oliver: Native-Lived Colonialism and the Agency of Life Projects: A View from the Northwest Coast 4: Kurt A. Jordan: Pruning Colonialism: Vantage Point, Local Political Economy, and Cultural Entanglement in the Archaeology of Post-1415 Indigenous Peoples Part 2: Colonizing and Decolonizing Spaces, Places, Things, and Identities 5: M. Dores Cruz: The Nature of Culture: Sites, Ancestors and Trees in the Archaeology of Southern Mozambique 6: Michael V. Cox: Indigenous Archaeology and the Pueblo Revolt of 1680: Social Mobility and Boundary Maintenance in Colonial Contexts 7: Jun Sunseri: Hiding in Plain Sight: Engineered colonial landscapes and indigenous reinvention on the New Mexican frontier 8: Mark Tveskov and Amie Cohen: Frontier Forts, Ambiguity, and Manifest Destiny: The Changing Role of Fort Lane in the Cultural Landscape of the Oregon Territory, 1853-1929 9: Charles R. Cobb and Stephanie Sapp: Imperial Anxiety and the Dissolution of Colonial Space and Practice at Fort Moore, South Carolina 10: Jane Lydon: Intimacy and Distance: Life on the Australian Aboriginal Mission 11: Diana DiPaolo Loren: Casting Identity: Sumptuous Action and Colonized Bodies in Seventeenth Century New England 12: Rob Mann: Persistent Pots, Durable Kettles, and Colonialist Discourse: Aboriginal Pottery Production in French Colonial Basse Part 3: Displacement, Hybridity, and Colonizing the Colonial 13: Audrey Horning: Challenging Colonial Equations? The Gaelic Experience in Early Modern Ireland 14: Matthew A. Beaudoin: The Process of Hybridization among the Labrador Metis 15: James A. Delle: Archaeology and the Tensions of Empire 16: Mark W. Hauser and Stephan Lenik: Material Practices and Colonial Chronologies in Dominica, Eastern Caribbean Part 4: Contested Pasts and Contemporary Implications 17: Neal Ferris: Being Iroquoian, Being Iroquois: A Thousand Year Heritage of Becoming 18: Andrew Martindale: Archaeology Taken to Court: Unravelling the Epistemology of Cultural Tradition in the Context of Aboriginal Title Cases 19: Paul J. Lane: Being 'Indigenous' and Being 'Colonized' in Africa: Contrasting Experiences and Their Implications for a Post-Colonial Archaeology 20: Peter R. Schmidt: Deconstructing Archaeologies of African Colonialism: Making and Unmaking the Subaltern Commentary and Afterword 21: Peter van Dommelen: Commentary: Subaltern Archaeologies 22: Chris Gosden: Commentary: The Archaeology of the Colonized and Global Archaeological Theory 23: Ann B. Stahl: Afterword: Vantage Points in an Archaeology of ColonialismReviewsthis excellent volume's critical exploration of the nature of archaeological epistemologies should interest many archaeologists and historians. * Craig N. Cipolla, Medieval Archaeology * this excellent volume's critical exploration of the nature of archaeological epistemologies should interest many archaeologists and historians. Craig N. Cipolla, Medieval Archaeology Author InformationNeal Ferris is the Lawson Chair of Canadian Archaeology and an Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology/Museum of Ontario Archaeology, at the University of Western Ontario. Rodney Harrison is a Reader in Archaeology, Heritage, and Museum Studies in the Institute of Archaeology at University College London. Michael V. Wilcox is an Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Stanford University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |