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The Archaeology of Class in Urban America

The Archaeology of Class in Urban America

The Archaeology of Class in Urban America

Stephen A. Mrozowski, University of Massachusetts, Boston
September 2012
Available
Paperback
9781107407633
$46.00
USD
Paperback
USD
Hardback

    No examination of contemporary urban communities would be complete without the discussion of class identity. But how did class identity inform the urban communities of yesteryear? Taking Newport, Rhode Island in the eighteenth century and Lowell, Massachusetts in the nineteenth century, at the peak of their economic powers when they represented some of the purist forms of capitalist production in North America, as case studies, this book explores the material and biological manifestations of class identity. Stephen Mrozowski uses a combination of documentary research, material cultural studies, and environmental archaeology to probe the lives of artisans, merchants, and mill workers in these urban communities. Taking an interdisciplinary approach to fully examine burgeoning notions of class, he offers significant insights into the factors shaping those notions. This engaging study, supported throughout by tables, illustrations and graphs, is required reading for all students of urban history and historical archaeology.

    • Presents a vivid reconstruction of the lives of workers in some of the earliest centres of capitalism in North America
    • Provides an in-depth analysis of material realities drawing on archaeological, environmental and documentary evidence
    • Fully supports the study with illustrations, maps and tables

    Reviews & endorsements

    "An important contribution to the understanding of 18th- and 19-th century urban life." -- Choice

    "...The Archaeology of Class in Urban America is a strong example of the multifaceted, interdisciplinary research that characterizes historical archaeology as a field of inquiry. ... delivers on its promises. ...It is a rich interdisciplinary text...accessible and interesting to a wide array of audiences. --H-Net Reviews

    "...this volume is a valuable contribution to the literature of historical archaeology. It is well illustrated, parsimoniously written, intelligent and imaginative in its interpretation of the empirical evidence and historical literature." --Canadian Journal of Archaeology

    See more reviews

    Product details

    September 2012
    Paperback
    9781107407633
    212 pages
    244 × 170 × 11 mm
    0.35kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Individuals in context: the world of eighteenth century Newport
    • 3. Shifting the focus: archaeology of the urban household
    • 4. A new world created: nineteenth century Lowell
    • 5. Interrogating the experiment: Lowell's urban space and culture
    • 6. Conclusion: contested spaces and the threads of everyday life
    • 7. Epilogue: towards a dialectical archaeology of class
    • Appendix A. Isolating and dating archaeological assemblages in the urban context.
      Author
    • Stephen A. Mrozowski , University of Massachusetts, Boston