2015
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1422190112
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Dynamics of change in multiethnic societies: An archaeological perspective from colonial North America

Abstract: This Perspective presents an overview of the archaeology of pluralistic colonies (approximately late 1500s-1800s) in North America. It complements the other special feature papers in this issue on ancient societies in Mesoamerica, the Near East, the Armenian Highlands, Peru, and China by presenting another body of literature for examining the dynamics of change in multiethnic societies from a different time and place. In synthesizing archaeological investigations of mercantile, plantation, and missionary colon… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(42 reference statements)
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“…As such, the traditional preparation and shared consumption of Spanish-style stews highlights how certain alien practices may be used to negotiate, create, and sustain multi layered social relations within a colonial setting. For newcomers to the mission, the sharing of the food preparation and cooking using traditional and colonial culinary practices likely created new communal and cohesive social relationships (Lightfoot 2015). Regardless of the acceptance or rejection of colonial food resources, these meals were given different meanings from the Spanish, and instead, this practice was integrated into preexisting social and cultural values.…”
Section: Commensalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, the traditional preparation and shared consumption of Spanish-style stews highlights how certain alien practices may be used to negotiate, create, and sustain multi layered social relations within a colonial setting. For newcomers to the mission, the sharing of the food preparation and cooking using traditional and colonial culinary practices likely created new communal and cohesive social relationships (Lightfoot 2015). Regardless of the acceptance or rejection of colonial food resources, these meals were given different meanings from the Spanish, and instead, this practice was integrated into preexisting social and cultural values.…”
Section: Commensalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Emphasis on rebellion and resistance has also been the norm in archaeology, especially in postcolonial archaeology—something that has been reconsidered recently (Liebmann & Murphy 2010; Lightfoot 2015). Archaeologists sided with the oppressed subaltern against the elite or the colonial authorities by evidencing mainly uprisings and defiance, among slaves in colonial South Africa (Hall 2000) and nineteenth-century Islamic Zanzibar (Croucher 2015), among indigenous and slaves alike in Portuguese Brazil (Gomes Coelho 2009; Orser & Funari 2001), among indigenous women on the Spanish Orinoco frontier (Tarble de Scaramelli 2012) and female convicts in nineteenth-century British Australia (Casella 2012), or among peasants and colonized communities in ancient and modern Cyprus (Given 2004) and the ancient Mediterranean (Cañete Jiménez & Vives-Ferrándiz Sánchez 2011; Zuchtriegel 2018), to cite some examples.…”
Section: Are Subalterns Political Subjects?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although different authors have been critical about the fact that change has been valued in an overly positive way in archaeology (e.g. Panich, 2013; González-Ruibal, 2014; Lightfoot, 2015), it is also true that many archaeologists still consider that ‘giving voice to the voiceless’ requires attributing them the same attitude towards change and the same degree of individuality that characterize individuals in the present (e.g. Sampson, 1988; Ewing, 1990; Cohen, 1994; Knapp & Meskell, 1997; Sökefeld, 1999; Moore, 2000; Knapp & Van Dommelen, 2008; Machin, 2009; but see Thomas, 2004, for a critique).…”
Section: Some Thoughts On Eurocentrism and Historical Archaeologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding the historical archaeology of culture contact and colonialism, Kent Lightfoot (2015: 9218) has noticed how categories dealing with contact—from the much-reviled acculturation to more recent constructs such as hybridity, creolization, or ethnogenesis—have focused mainly on the dynamics of change, although he has also drawn attention to the ‘growing interest in the investigation of cultural persistence’ (2015: 9221). Works by several authors (including Lightfoot's in 1995, and Lightfoot et al, 1998) have considered both types of dynamics, trying to increase awareness of the fact that societies are not only made of changes but also of continuities (e.g.…”
Section: Archaeology and The Idea Of Changementioning
confidence: 99%