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Archaeologies of Mobility and Movement
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​ INTRODUCTION Mary C. Beaudry and Travis G. Parno Introduction: Archaeologies of Movement   PART ONE: MOVEMENT OF OBJECTS Visa Immonen Intercontinental Flows of Desire: Brass Kettles in Lapland and in the Colony of New Sweden Scott Joseph Allen The Movement of People and Things in the Captania de Pernambuco: Challenges for Archaeological Interpretation Oscar Aldred Farmers, Sorting Folds, Earmarks and Sheep in Iceland Ronald Salzer Mobility Ahead of its Time - a 15th-century Austrian Pocket Sundial as a Trailblazing Instrument for Time Measurement on Travels   PART TWO: MOVEMENT OF PEOPLE Chief-fu Jeff Cheng  and Ellen Hseih The Archaeological Study of the Military Dependents Village of Taiwan Mats Burström Buried Memories: Wartime Caches and Family History in Estonia Craig Cipolla Resituating Homeland: Motion, Movement & Ethnogenesis at Brothertown Sean Winter The Global versus the Local: Modelling the British System of Convict Transportation after 1830 Karen Hutchins Movement and Liminality at the Margins: the Wandering Poor in Eighteenth-Century Massachusetts Magdalena Naum (University of Cambridge) The Malady of Emigrants: Homesickness and Longing in the Colony of New Sweden, 1638–1655 PART THREE: MOVEMENT THROUGH SPACES John F. Cherry Luke J. Pecoraro  Krysta Ryzewski "A Kinda Sacred Place": The Rock and Roll Ruins of Air Studios, Montserrat Travis Parno The Mosaic and the Interruption: An Approach to Material Aesthetics at Historic House Sites Christina Hodge Setting the Structure: Affordances of the Harvard Indian College Alexander Keim (Boston University) In the Street: Personal Adornment and Embodied Movement in the Urban Landscapes of Boston’s North End   AFTERWORD Shannon Dawdy TBD

About the Author

Mary C. Beaudry is Professor of Archaeology, Anthropology, and Gastronomy and Chair of the Department of Archaeology at Boston University. She is author of Findings: The Material Culture of Needlework and Sewing (Yale, 2006), co-author of “Living on the Boott”: Historical Archaeology of the Boott Mills Boardinghouses in Lowell, Massachusetts (University of Massachusetts, 1996), editor of Documentary Archaeology in the New World (Cambridge, 1988), co-editor with Dan Hicks of The Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology (Cambridge, 2006) and of The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies (Oxford, 2010), co-editor with Anne Yentsch of The Art and Mystery of Historical Archaeology (CRC, 1992), and co-editor with James Symonds of Interpreting the Early Modern World: Transatlantic Perspectives (Springer, 2010). She has published numerous journal articles and book chapters and served for 15 years as editor of the journal Northeast Historical Archaeology. Travis G. Parno is a PhD candidate in Boston University's Department of Archaeology. He served on the CHAT conference committee and assisted in the planning and implementation of the conference. His dissertation looks to extend the temporal focus of household archaeology and explores intersections of place-making and heritage at the Fairbanks House in Dedham, MA. His previous publications include studies of archaeological photography (in Archaeologies: Journal of the World Archaeological Congress), three-dimensional digital modeling (in Society of Post-Medieval Archaeology), Catholic material culture at James Fort, VA (in Historical Archaeologies of Cognition), and contemporary graffiti in Bristol, UK (in Wild Signs: Inscribing Society).

Reviews

From the reviews:“The volume covers a wide range of topics, temporalities and geographical extents, from Austrian fifteenth century pocket sundials to the modern ruins of the AIR studios on the Caribbean island of Montserrat. … This volume is also a useful addition to the corpora of movement studies in archaeology in that it extends the reach of this research to the recent past. … it is a well-produced volume with a good number of quality illustrations. It will serve the interests of historical archaeologists well … .” (Alice J. Rogers, Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Vol. 28 (2), 2013)

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