“An Acre of Land to Plant or a Stick of Wood to Make a Fence or Fire”: An Archaeology of Mohegan Allotment

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Craig N. Cipolla, James Quinn, Jay Levy
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Abstract

Although land loss is among the most profound impacts that settler colonialism had for Indigenous societies across North America, archaeologists rarely study one of the principal colonial mechanisms of land dispossession: allotment. This process forever altered the course of North American history, breaking up collectively held Indigenous lands into lots “owned” by individuals and families while further stressing local Indigenous subsistence patterns, social relations, political organization, and more. Archaeology's long-term, material, and sometimes collaborative vantage stands to offer insights on this process and how it played out for Indigenous peoples in different times and places. As its case study, this article considers the allotment of Mohegan lands in southeastern Connecticut (USA). An archaeology of Mohegan allotment speaks to more than land loss and cultural change. It provides evidence of an enduring and long-term Indigenous presence on the land; of the challenges faced and overcome by Mohegan peoples living through, and with, settler colonialism; and of the nuances of Indigenous-colonial archaeological records. This study also shows the importance of Indigenous and collaborative archaeologies for shedding new light on these challenging but important archaeological traces.

"一亩地用来种植,一根木头用来做篱笆或生火":莫希干分配土地考古学
虽然失去土地是殖民定居主义对北美土著社会造成的最深远影响之一,但考古学家却很少研究剥夺土地的主要殖民机制之一:分配。这一过程永远地改变了北美的历史进程,将集体拥有的土著土地分割成个人和家庭 "拥有 "的地块,同时进一步强调了当地土著的生存模式、社会关系、政治组织等。考古学具有长期性、物质性、有时是合作性的优势,可以为这一进程以及它如何在不同的时间和地点对土著人民产生影响提供见解。本文以美国康涅狄格州东南部莫希干人的土地分配为例进行研究。莫希根土地分配考古学所揭示的不仅仅是土地的丧失和文化的变迁。它证明了土著人在这片土地上的持久和长期存在;证明了莫希干人在殖民定居者统治下面临和克服的挑战;证明了土著殖民考古记录的细微差别。这项研究还表明,土著考古学和合作考古学对于揭示这些具有挑战性但重要的考古痕迹具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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