2010
DOI: 10.1007/s11759-010-9128-6
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Historical Archaeo-Geographies of Scaled Statehood: American Federalism and Material Practices of National Prohibition in California, 1917–1933

Abstract: ________________________________________________________________This paper discusses the ways that a more explicit engagement with the discipline of historical geography could contribute to archaeologies of the recent and contemporary past. Scholars working in this time period must consider multiple scales of connectivity between people and places through time and would benefit from political geography's recent theorizing on scale and the state. We present a preliminary case study of what we term a historical … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Jugs and 'growlers' connected pubs with homes, as stolen drinking vessels roamed local neighbourhoods (Owens et al, 2010;Owens & Jeffries, 2016). Bottles turn up in Victorian rubbish heaps and can help to trace the material geographies of Prohibition in the United States (Licence, 2015;Mosher & Wilkie, 2010). The last area that might receive more attention concerns alcohol itself: what makes pubs different to "great good places" like barbershops, for example?…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jugs and 'growlers' connected pubs with homes, as stolen drinking vessels roamed local neighbourhoods (Owens et al, 2010;Owens & Jeffries, 2016). Bottles turn up in Victorian rubbish heaps and can help to trace the material geographies of Prohibition in the United States (Licence, 2015;Mosher & Wilkie, 2010). The last area that might receive more attention concerns alcohol itself: what makes pubs different to "great good places" like barbershops, for example?…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%