
Forging Southeastern Identities
Description
Forging Southeastern Identities explores the many ways archaeologists and ethnohistorians define and trace the origins of Native Americans' collective social identity.
Forging Southeastern Identities: Social Archaeology and Ethnohistory of the Mississippian to Early Historic South, a groundbreaking collection of ten essays, covers a broad expanse of time—from the ninth to the nineteenth centuries—and focuses on a common theme of identity. These essays represent the various methods used by esteemed scholars today to study how Native Americans in the distant past created new social identities when old ideas of the self were challenged by changes in circumstance or by historical contingencies.
Archaeologists, anthropologists, and folklorists working in the Southeast have always recognized the region's social diversity; indeed, the central purpose of these disciplines is to study peoples overlooked by the mainstream. Yet the ability to define and trace the origins of a collective social identity—the means by which individuals or groups align themselves, always in contrast to others—has proven to be an elusive goal. Here, editors Gregory A. Waselkov and Marvin T. Smith champion the relational identification and categorical identification processes, taken from sociological theory, as effective analytical tools.
Taking up the challenge, the contributors have deployed an eclectic range of approaches to establish and inform an overarching theme of identity. Some investigate shell gorgets, textiles, shell trade, infrastructure, specific sites, or plant usage. Others focus on the edges of the Mississippian world or examine colonial encounters between Europeans and native peoples. A final chapter considers the adaptive malleability of historical legend in the telling and hearing of slave narratives.
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Persons
Gregory A. Waselkov is the author of Old Mobile Archaeology and the award-winning A Conquering Spirit: Fort Mims and the Redstick War of 1813–1814. He is a coauthor of Archéologie de l'Amérique coloniale française, which won Le Prix Lionel-Groulx. Waselkov serves as president of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference and was the former editor of the journal Southeastern Archaeology. He is a professor of anthropology and director of the Center for Archaeological Studies at the University of South Alabama.
Marvin T. Smith is the author of more than seventy scholarly publications, including The Archaeology of Aboriginal Culture Change in the Interior Southeast: Depopulation during the Early Historic Period and Coosa: The Rise and Fall of a Southeastern Mississippian Chiefdom. He is a professor of anthropology at Valdosta State University in Georgia.
Content
List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction: Forging Southeastern Identities by Gregory A. Waselkov and Marvin T. Smith
Chapter 1. Shell Gorgets, Hybridity, and Identity Creation in the Hightower Region by Adam King and Johann A. Sawyer
Chapter 2. The Fabric of Power: Textiles in Mississippian Politics and Ritual by Penelope B. Drooker
Chapter 3. Revitalization Movements in the Prehistoric Southeast? An Example from the Irene Site by Rebecca Saunders
Chapter 4. Navigating the Mississippian World: Infrastructure in the Sixteenth-Century Native South by Robbie Ethridge
Chapter 5. Marine Shell Trade in the Post-Mississippian Southeast by Marvin T. Smith
Chapter 6. Joara, Cuenca, and Fort San Juan: The Construction of Colonial Identities at the Berry Site by David G. Moore, Christopher B. Rodning, and Robin A. Beck
Chapter 7. What's in a Phase? Disentangling Communities of Practice from Communities of Identity in Southeastern North America by John E. Worth
Chapter 8. Plant Use at a Mississippian and Contact-Period Site in the South Carolina Coastal Plain by Kandace D. Hollenbach
Chapter 9. The Grand Village of the Natchez Indians Was Indeed Grand: A Reconsideration of the Fatherland Site Landscape by Ian W. Brown and Vincas P. Steponaitis
Chapter 10. Nuances of Memory: Historical Legend vs. Legendary History by George E. Lankford
References Cited
Contributors
Index