Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Foreign Objects : Rethinking Indigenous Consumption in American Archaeology - Craig N. Cipolla

Foreign Objects

Rethinking Indigenous Consumption in American Archaeology

By: Craig N. Cipolla (Editor)

Hardcover | 11 April 2017 | Edition Number 3

At a Glance

Hardcover


$180.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $45.19 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 10 business days

Brass tinklers and pendants. Owl effigies, copper kettles, crucifixes with blue glass stones. What do they have in common? The answer spans thousands of years and a multitude of peoples and places, and reveals how people made sense of their world as they collected and used the objects they encountered.

Foreign Objects demonstrates the breadth and vibrancy of contemporary archaeology. Taking a broad set of archaeological cases from across the Americas, editor Craig N. Cipolla and the volume contributors explore how indigenous communities have socialized foreign objects over time. The book critiques the artificial divide between prehistory and history, studying instead the long-term indigenous histories of consumption, a term typically associated with capitalism and modern-world colonialism.

The case studies range from "exotic" stone tools used millennia ago to nineteenth-century patent medicines made and marketed by an Indian doctress. Foreign Objects focuses on how indigenous groups and foreign objects became entangled with one another in myriad ways. The book explores how the framework of consumption can shed new light on trade, exchange, materiality, and cultural production.

Contributors place foreign objects in the spotlight and offer a comparison of how this general class of material played a part in indigenous and colonial worlds. Each chapter illustrates how notions of consumption fit into their place in time and also delves into how foreign objects related to ideas of the body and personhood, how people used them to participate in political and spiritual worlds, and how they presented new ways of enduring or resisting European colonialism and capitalism. Foreign Objects is a critical look at consumption through the lens of indigenous knowledge and archaeological theory.
Industry Reviews
A significant step toward defining a new area of study."-Christina Hodge, author of Consumerism and the Emergence of the Middle Class in Colonial America

"The authors in this book challenge the notion that indigenous people naively adopted 'foreign' things and ideas without thoughtful cultural engagement and interpretation of these objects into their own systems."-Liam Frink, author of A Tale of Three Villages: Indigenous-Colonial Interactions in Southwestern Alaska, 1740-1950

More in Archaeology

1177 B.C. : The Year Civilization Collapsed: Revised and Updated - Eric H. Cline
The Dawn of Everything : A New History of Humanity - David Graeber
The Children of Ash and Elm : A History of the Vikings - Neil Price
Domination - Alice Roberts

Paperback

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
Forms of the Visible : An Anthropology of Figuration - Philippe Descola
Urbanism and Empire in Roman Sicily - Laura Pfuntner

RRP $92.99

$88.99

Istanbul : A Tale of Three Cities - Bettany Hughes

RRP $29.99

$24.99

17%
OFF
Fingerprints Of The Gods : The Quest Continues - Graham Hancock

RRP $52.99

$40.75

23%
OFF
Crypt : Life, Death and Disease in the Middle Ages and Beyond - Alice Roberts
Reconstruction of Cultural Heritage - Juliet Verni
Egyptian Archaeology and the Museum - Brett Cody
History and Material Culture - Matthew Mckenzie