Networks of history and memory

Author:

Wallis Neill J.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, University of Florida,

Abstract

Many Archaic and Woodland period monuments in south-eastern North America were civic and ceremonial gathering centers. The built landscapes that emphasized these features are likely to have incorporated histories and memories in locally distinctive ways across the region. However, their attribution by archaeologists to broad temporal and social categories has tended to disguise this individuality. In this article I argue that the major structural changes that define the transition between the Archaic and Woodland periods were intersected by landscapes that were integral to the construction of locally important histories and memories. I point to an example from the Woodland period on the lower St Johns River, Florida, in which spatial relationships between monuments, recurrent deposition of mnemonic artifacts, and movement of people between places recreated a relational kind of social identity and personhood that was locally distinct.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Archeology

Reference144 articles.

1. Anderson, D.G. (1998) `Swift Creek in Regional Perspective', in M. Williams and D.T. Elliott (eds) A World Engraved: Archaeology of the Swift Creek Culture, pp. 274-300. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.

2. Anderson, D.G. and R.C. Mainfort, Jr (2002) `An Introduction to Woodland Archaeology in the Southeast', in D.G. Anderson and R.C. Mainfort, Jr (eds) The Woodland Southeast, pp. 1-19. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.

3. Ashley, K.H. (1998) `Swift Creek Traits in Northeastern Florida: Ceramics, Mounds, and Middens', in M. Williams and D. Elliot (eds) A World Engraved: Archaeology of the Swift Creek Culture, pp. 197-221. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.

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