2017
DOI: 10.1007/s41636-017-0011-9
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Writ on the Landscape: Racialization, Whiteness, and River Street

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…2020; Odewale et al. 2018; Sterling 2015; White 2017), challenging the historical whiteness of archaeological research by foregrounding the histories of African Americans. If non‐Indigenous archaeologists hope to promote and contribute to systemic and structural change in archaeological research, it is imperative that we follow the lead of Indigenous and Black archaeology by focusing on community‐based research and collaboration that involves descendant groups from both communities.…”
Section: Decolonial Indigenous Archaeology and Cultural Resource Mana...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2020; Odewale et al. 2018; Sterling 2015; White 2017), challenging the historical whiteness of archaeological research by foregrounding the histories of African Americans. If non‐Indigenous archaeologists hope to promote and contribute to systemic and structural change in archaeological research, it is imperative that we follow the lead of Indigenous and Black archaeology by focusing on community‐based research and collaboration that involves descendant groups from both communities.…”
Section: Decolonial Indigenous Archaeology and Cultural Resource Mana...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, however, studies of various and diverse White populations seldom frame race as an essential analytic, instead choosing to critically dissect, for example, class, labour, gender, religion, nationalism, identity formation and so on. While some archaeologists have recently highlighted the need to take whiteness seriously (Matthews 2015;Gorsline 2015), aside from Alison Bell's (2005) study of White ethnogenesis in the Chesapeake and a recent issue of Historical archaeology, guest-edited by William White and Christopher Fennell (2017;White 2017), whiteness hardly appears in archaeological parlance at all. This normalizes whiteness to the extent that it is viewed as irrelevant in discussions of race and racialization.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%