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Archaeological Anthropology

2011

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Paul Mullins

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

The Archaeology Of Consumption, Paul Mullins Jan 2011

The Archaeology Of Consumption, Paul Mullins

Paul Mullins

A vast range of archaeological studies could be construed as studies of consumption, so it is perhaps surprising that relatively few archaeologists have defined their scholarly focus as consumption. This review examines how archaeology can produce a distinctive picture of consumption that remains largely unaddressed in the rich interdisciplinary consumer scholarship. Archaeological research provides concrete evidence of everyday materiality that is not available in most documentary records or ethnographic resources, thus offering an exceptionally powerful mechanism to examine complicated consumption tactics. In a broad archaeological and anthropological context, consumption studies reflect the ways consumers negotiate, accept, and resist goods-dominant meanings …


Practicing Anthropology And The Politics Of Engagement: 2010 Year In Review, Paul Mullins Jan 2011

Practicing Anthropology And The Politics Of Engagement: 2010 Year In Review, Paul Mullins

Paul Mullins

In 2010, a rapidly growing body of public scholars continued to conduct engaged research that involved various forms of collaboration, advocacy, and activism. Practicing anthropologists are among the most powerful champions of engaged scholarship and are increasingly focused on tracing the concrete dimensions of public engagement. Practicing anthropologists in 2010 made a concerted effort to critically assess precisely what constitutes collaboration, engagement, activism, advocacy, and a host of similarly politicized but ambiguous terms. This self-reflection has probed the philosophical, political, and methodological dimensions of engagement and painted a rich and complex picture of practicing anthropology. In this article, I review …


Archaeologies Of Race And Urban Poverty: The Politics Of Slumming, Engagement, And The Color Line, Paul Mullins Jan 2011

Archaeologies Of Race And Urban Poverty: The Politics Of Slumming, Engagement, And The Color Line, Paul Mullins

Paul Mullins

For more than a century, social reformers and scholars have examined urban impoverishment and inequalities along the color line and linked “slum life” to African America. An engaged archaeology provides a powerful mechanism to assess how urban renewal and tenement reform discourses were used to reproduce color and class inequalities. Such an archaeology should illuminate how comparable ideological distortions are wielded in the contemporary world to reproduce longstanding inequalities. A 20th century neighborhood in Indianapolis, Indiana is examined to probe how various contemporary constituencies borrow from, negotiate, and refute long-established urban impoverishment and racial discourses and stake claims to diverse …