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A House But Not A Home? Measuring 'Householdness' in the Daily Lives of Monticello's 'Nail Boys'.

机译:房子而不是房子?在蒙蒂塞洛的“钉子男孩”的日常生活中测量“家庭”。

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摘要

Monticello, the plantation home of Thomas Jefferson, was also home to more than 100 African American slaves between 1771 and 1826. As many as 40 members of this community lived and worked on Mulberry Row, once a bustling avenue of residential and industrial activity adjacent to the Palladian mansion. Archaeological excavations in 1957 and 1982--1983 uncovered the remains of Mulberry Row's nailery, where preteen and teenaged enslaved "nail boys" manufactured nails for internal use and sale. These excavations revealed surprisingly high amounts of domestic artifacts, particularly ceramics and glass, indicating the young nailers also may have lived inside the nailery. This study investigates whether the nail boys maintained some semblance of childhood through ongoing participation in their parents' households or fully took on the mantle of adulthood by forming a household of their own, independent of their parents, as expressed in the local production and consumption of household goods.;This question is explored within the contexts of the archaeology of slavery, household archaeology, and the archaeology of children. The intersection of these three themes provides a richer and more realistic understanding of the boys' complex lives. In this study, artifact abundance indices and Pearson residuals are used to compare artifacts from the nailery to artifacts from industrial and dwelling sites across Monticello plantation. I hypothesized that if the nail boys were participating in food production and consumption, the abundance of refined and utilitarian ceramics and glass would be similar to or higher than the abundance of those artifacts in dwelling sites. If the abundance of the nailery artifacts was lower than those for dwelling sites and was therefore more similar to those for industrial sites, the nail boys probably did not participate in domestic activities. The indices and residuals reveal a high abundance of refined ceramics and glass in the nailery and a low abundance of utilitarian ceramics, which would have been needed to cook and store food. The data suggest the nail boys engaged in the consumption of food and associated artifacts but participated in little or no food production. It is likely that their age and gender prevented them from fully engaging in food production within the nailery. This project adds to the fledgling research into slave children, who have traditionally been ignored by childhood, slave, and household archaeologists.
机译:蒙蒂塞洛是托马斯·杰斐逊(Thomas Jefferson)的种植园,在1771年至1826年期间,这里也是100多名非洲裔美国奴隶的家园。该社区多达40名成员在桑树街(Mulberry Row)居住和工作,桑树街曾经是繁华的住宅和工业活动区,毗邻帕拉第奥式的豪宅。 1957年和1982--1983年的考古发掘发现了Mulberry Row的指甲厂的遗迹,在那里,青春期和青少年奴役的“指甲男孩”制造了供内部使用和销售的指甲。这些发掘显示出令人惊讶的大量家居文物,尤其是陶瓷和玻璃,这表明年轻的指甲匠也可能生活在指甲匠内部。这项研究调查了钉子男孩是否通过持续参与父母的家庭来维持童年的童年,还是通过组建自己的,独立于父母的家庭来充分承担成年的负担,这在当地的生产和消费中得到了体现。家庭用品。;这个问题是在奴隶制考古学,家庭考古学和儿童考古学的背景下探讨的。这三个主题的交叉点提供了对男孩的复杂生活的更丰富,更现实的理解。在这项研究中,人工产物丰度指数和皮尔逊残差用于比较钉子人工产物和蒙蒂塞洛人工林中工业和居住场所的人工产物。我假设如果钉子男孩参加食品生产和消费,精制和实用的陶瓷和玻璃的丰度将类似于或高于居住场所中这些文物的丰度。如果指甲制品的丰度低于居住场所的甲制品,因此与工业场所的甲制品更为相似,则指甲男孩可能没有参与家庭活动。指数和残渣显示出在指甲行业中有大量的精制陶瓷和玻璃,而有少量的实用陶瓷,这是烹饪和储存食物所需要的。数据表明,美甲男孩从事食品和相关人工制品的消费,但很少或没有食品生产。他们的年龄和性别可能阻止他们充分从事指甲行业的食品生产。这个项目增加了对奴隶孩子的研究,这些孩子在传统上一直被童年,奴隶和家庭考古学家所忽略。

著录项

  • 作者

    McVey, Shannon L.;

  • 作者单位

    University of South Florida.;

  • 授予单位 University of South Florida.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Archaeology.;History United States.
  • 学位 M.A.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 177 p.
  • 总页数 177
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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