2010
DOI: 10.1007/bf03376802
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Labor and Agricultural Production at Sylvester Manor Plantation, Shelter Island, New York

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Cited by 13 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The profound disempowerment of Aboriginal pearl divers as effective slaves within the colonial project only further obscures their activity from archaeological inquiry (Martínez and Vickers 2012;Winter 2016). This paper draws on previous international literature developing methodologies to overcome such challenges (e.g., Deagan 2008;deFrance and Hanson 2008;Landon 2009;McGuire 1982;Silliman 2010;Trigg and Landon 2010). In particular, previous zooarchaeological work investigating workers and slaves under provisioned contexts inform this paper's approach (e.g., Copperstone 2014;Coutts 1976;Fountain 1995;Gibbs 2005;Lawrence 2001Lawrence , 2006Lawrence and Tucker 2002;Orser 1988Orser , 1990Wallman 2014).…”
Section: Pearling Labor In the Northwestmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The profound disempowerment of Aboriginal pearl divers as effective slaves within the colonial project only further obscures their activity from archaeological inquiry (Martínez and Vickers 2012;Winter 2016). This paper draws on previous international literature developing methodologies to overcome such challenges (e.g., Deagan 2008;deFrance and Hanson 2008;Landon 2009;McGuire 1982;Silliman 2010;Trigg and Landon 2010). In particular, previous zooarchaeological work investigating workers and slaves under provisioned contexts inform this paper's approach (e.g., Copperstone 2014;Coutts 1976;Fountain 1995;Gibbs 2005;Lawrence 2001Lawrence , 2006Lawrence and Tucker 2002;Orser 1988Orser , 1990Wallman 2014).…”
Section: Pearling Labor In the Northwestmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That is, we chose to work upward from the materials and the practices they represented into the social arenas that gave them the most salience. Studies have already demonstrated the value of gender as a fundamental experience and social vector for understanding the routes of colonialism into various indigenous societies, especially considering the ways these vectors intersected with sexual-gender divisions of labor and economy (e.g., Frink 2009Frink , 2010Silliman 2001;Spector 1993;Trigg and Landon 2010;Voss 2008). In addition, we use our specific datasets and cultural contexts to build on anthro-pological studies of gender already established in the archaeology (Nassaney 2004;Rubertone 2001) and ethnohistory (Bragdon 1996(Bragdon , 2009Den Ouden 2005;Richmond and Den Ouden 2004) of Native peoples in New England.…”
Section: Shellfish Collection and Community Connections In Eighteenthmentioning
confidence: 99%