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Sherds of History Myriam Arcangeli

Sherds of History By Myriam Arcangeli

Sherds of History by Myriam Arcangeli


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Summary

Examines potsherds from four colonial sites in the Antillean island of Guadeloupe to discover what these everyday items tell us about the people who used them. In the process, she reveals a wealth of information about the lives of the elite planters, the middle and lower classes, and enslaved Africans.

Sherds of History Summary

Sherds of History: Domestic Life in Colonial Guadeloupe by Myriam Arcangeli

Investigating ceramic artifacts to better understand daily life in the French colonial Caribbean

Ceramics serve as one of the best-known artifacts excavated by archaeologists. They are carefully described, classified, and dated, but rarely do scholars consider their many and varied uses. Breaking from this convention, Myriam Arcangeli examines potsherds from four colonial sites in the Antillean island of Guadeloupe to discover what these everyday items tell us about the people who used them. In the process, she reveals a wealth of information about the lives of the elite planters, the middle and lower classes, and enslaved Africans.

By analyzing how the people of Guadeloupe used ceramicswhether jugs for transporting and purifying water, pots for cooking, or pearlware for eatingArcangeli spotlights the larger social history of Creole life. What emerges is a detail rich picture of water consumption habits, changing foodways, and concepts of health. Sherds of History offers a compelling and novel study of the material record and the ceramic culture it represents to broaden our understanding of race, class, and gender in French-colonial societies in the Caribbean and the United States.

Arcangelis innovative interpretation of the material record will challenge the ways archaeologists analyze ceramics.

Sherds of History Reviews

A successful study of the incorporation of ceramics into the emerging Creole social system in the French West Indies. - American Antiquity

Arcangeli uses her analyses to give insight into social and cultural aspects of the society. . . . Recommended. - Choice

An invaluable source for both interpretive insight and comparative reference for domestic ceramic signatures as varied by class, race, occupation, and economy. - Historical Archaeology

Sheds new and interesting light on the daily lives of urban households in a Caribbean island during the slavery era. It is an innovative and illuminating example of the use of the methods of historic archaeology to study la vie quotidienne in a colonial society. - Caribbean Quarterly

A richly textured and nuanced analysis of life in the French Caribbean colony of Guadeloupe during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries from the point of view of ceramic users, rather than from the perspective of producers, in the context of daily use. - Cambridge Archaeological Journal

Readers gain a strong sense of how ceramics were used in everyday eighteenth- and nineteenth-century life and work, often by enslaved domestic workers gathering water, setting tables, cooking food and promoting bodily health. - Antiquity

Provides scholars with a trove of insights into the variety of Guadeloupes ceramic-related practices . . . and their similarities and differences across class and race divides and between colony and metropole that will resonate for ceramic analyses, future studies of Guadeloupe, and broader comparative analyses of colonial contexts across the globe. - American Anthropologist

Additional information

NGR9780813080581
9780813080581
0813080584
Sherds of History: Domestic Life in Colonial Guadeloupe by Myriam Arcangeli
New
Paperback
University Press of Florida
2024-05-14
226
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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