
Materializing Colonial Identities in Clay
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- A Note on Terminology
- Introduction | Corey A. H. Sattes and Jon Bernard Marcoux
- Part I: Colonoware as a Materialization of Social Relationships
- 1. Using Indigenous Colonoware to Trace Social Coalescence across the Early Colonial Landscape of the Southeastern United States | Jon Bernard Marcoux and Corey A. H. Sattes
- 2. Colonoware among the Upper Creeks of Alabama | Craig T. Sheldon Jr.
- 3. Colonoware in the Rappahannock River Valley of Virginia, ca. 1665-1780 | Julia A. King, Katherine P. Gill, and Scott M. Strickland
- 4. Pottery and Property: Redefining Colonoware through Seventeenth-Century Social Relations | Andrew Agha
- Part II. Colonoware as a Materialization of Economic Relationships in the Lowcountry
- 5. Colonoware in the City: Archaeological Assemblages from Charleston, South Carolina | Martha A. Zierden, Ronald W. Anthony, and Sarah E. Platt
- 6. Colonoware, Craftwork, and the Rise of Black Artisan Potters | J. W. Joseph
- 7. Catawba Contributions to South Carolina Colonoware | David J. Cranford
- 8. Colonoware Variation, Exchange, and Use from Drayton Hall's South Flanker Well | Corey A. H. Sattes
- Commentary: Situating Colonoware Studies at the Intersections | Jodi A. Barnes
- Appendix: Colonoware Vessels and Sherds and Major Associations among the Upper Creeks of Alabama
- References Cited
- Contributors
- Index
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