Including
debates about cultural survivals in the 1920s, efforts to find "Africanisms" at
Kingsley plantation in the 1960s, and the realization--as late as the 1970s--that
colonoware pottery was created by enslaved people, Charles Orser looks at the influential
and often mistaken ideas of prominent anthropologists, archaeologists, and
historians. Extending to the present, Orser describes how archaeology better
recognizes and appreciates the variety and richness of African American culture
during slavery, due in large part to the Black archaeologists, past and
present, who have worked to counter racism in the field.
While
acknowledging the colonial legacy of archaeology, Charles Orser outlines the
ways the discipline has benefitted by adopting antiracist principles and
partnerships with descendant communities. This book points to the contributions
of excavators and researchers whose roles have been overlooked and anticipates exciting
future work in African American archaeology.
Publication
of this work made possible by a Sustaining the Humanities through the American
Rescue Plan grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.