ABSTRACT

Material Worlds examines consumption from an archaeological perspective, broadly exploring the intersection of social relations and objects through the processes of production, distribution, use, reuse, and discard. Interrogating individual objects as well as considering the contexts in which acts of consumption take place, a range of case studies present the intertwined issues of power, inequality, identity, and community as mediated through choice, access, and use of the diversity of mass-produced goods. Key themes of this innovative volume include the relationship between colonial, political and economic structures and the practices of consumption, the use of consumer goods in the construction and negotiation of identity, and the dialectic between strategies of consumption and individual or community choices.

Situating studies of consumerism within the field of historical archaeology, this exciting collection reflects on the interrelationship between the material and ideological aspects of culture. With a focus on North America from the seventeenth through the early twentieth centuries, Material Worlds is an important examination of consumption which will appeal to scholars with interests in colonialism, gender and race, as well as those engaged with the material culture of the emergent modern world.


 

chapter 1|8 pages

An historical archaeology of consumerism

Re-centering objects, re-engaging with data

chapter 2|26 pages

Modeling consumption

A social network analysis of mission Santa Catalina de Guale

chapter 3|21 pages

“The blood and life of a Commonwealth”

Illicit trade, identity formation, and imported clay tobacco pipes in the 17th-century Potomac River Valley

chapter 4|21 pages

Commoditization, consumption, and interpretive complexity

The contingent role of cowries in the early modern world

chapter 5|21 pages

Underpinning a plantation

A material culture approach to consumerism at George Washington’s Mount Vernon

chapter 7|22 pages

“With sundry other sorts of small ware too tedious to mention”

Petty consumerism on U.S. plantations

chapter 9|30 pages

The Abundance Index

Measuring variation in consumer behavior in the early modern Atlantic World

chapter 12|22 pages

Identity, choice, and the meaning of material culture

Two distinct villages on one Danish West Indies sugar estate

chapter 13|17 pages

“Ambitious to be conventional”

African American expressive culture and consumer imagination

chapter 14|9 pages

All-consuming modernity

chapter 15|9 pages

“Open the mind and close the sale”

Consumerism and the archaeological record