Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Archaeology of Urban Bondage: The New York African Burial Ground

View through CrossRef
The unexpected re-discovery and the ensuing excavation of the African Burial Ground – known in the 18th century as the “Negro Burial Ground” – lifted the lid on the early history of African presence in this part of the United States East Coast. The African Burial Ground Memorial is today one of the land-mark managed by the National Park Service, as a tribute to these men, women, and children, enslaved to build the wealth of that extraordinary and vibrant metropolis. The author of Archaeology of Urban Bondage has been part of the African Burial research project from its beginning in 1993 to its end in 2006 and this volume is the only comprehensive presentation of this unique project in its multidisciplinary dimension. It looks at the enslavement of Africans in the Atlantic world from their origins in Africa, their life and death in New Amsterdam-New York in the 17th -18th East coast, relying on history, archaeology, and bio-anthropology. The argumentation is rigorously fact-based and inferences data driven. The archaeology and history of the African presence in northeast United States are not limited to a European – African face to face. The genesis of the “Negro Burial Ground” is the result of different strands of history. Some issues, like the location of the African burial ground, generally taken for granted as starting point, are problematized in this book. Important questions as “why is the African burial ground located where it was?”, “how was the cemetery built up?”, “what are the key patterns of the buried population?”, “can agency and intentionality be discerned in the archaeological record at hand?”, are framed and addressed. Organized in two parts and framed from the “Global Africa” theoretical perspective, the book weaves data from history, archaeology, and biological anthropology to craft an integrated narrative on the deceased buried in the African Burial Ground.
Equinox Publishing Ltd.
Title: Archaeology of Urban Bondage: The New York African Burial Ground
Description:
The unexpected re-discovery and the ensuing excavation of the African Burial Ground – known in the 18th century as the “Negro Burial Ground” – lifted the lid on the early history of African presence in this part of the United States East Coast.
The African Burial Ground Memorial is today one of the land-mark managed by the National Park Service, as a tribute to these men, women, and children, enslaved to build the wealth of that extraordinary and vibrant metropolis.
The author of Archaeology of Urban Bondage has been part of the African Burial research project from its beginning in 1993 to its end in 2006 and this volume is the only comprehensive presentation of this unique project in its multidisciplinary dimension.
It looks at the enslavement of Africans in the Atlantic world from their origins in Africa, their life and death in New Amsterdam-New York in the 17th -18th East coast, relying on history, archaeology, and bio-anthropology.
The argumentation is rigorously fact-based and inferences data driven.
The archaeology and history of the African presence in northeast United States are not limited to a European – African face to face.
The genesis of the “Negro Burial Ground” is the result of different strands of history.
Some issues, like the location of the African burial ground, generally taken for granted as starting point, are problematized in this book.
Important questions as “why is the African burial ground located where it was?”, “how was the cemetery built up?”, “what are the key patterns of the buried population?”, “can agency and intentionality be discerned in the archaeological record at hand?”, are framed and addressed.
Organized in two parts and framed from the “Global Africa” theoretical perspective, the book weaves data from history, archaeology, and biological anthropology to craft an integrated narrative on the deceased buried in the African Burial Ground.

Related Results

(077) EXPLORING BONDAGE-RELATED INJURY RISKS: A FIRST LOOK AT PREVALENCE AND PATTERNS
(077) EXPLORING BONDAGE-RELATED INJURY RISKS: A FIRST LOOK AT PREVALENCE AND PATTERNS
Abstract Introduction Little is known about the potential injury risks specific to kink bondage. Previous research (Sprott &...
Cultural and Chronological Assemblages of the Sagayskaya protoka-4 kurgan burial ground (The Askiz District, the Khakassia Republic)
Cultural and Chronological Assemblages of the Sagayskaya protoka-4 kurgan burial ground (The Askiz District, the Khakassia Republic)
In 2021, the team of Federal Research Center of the Institute of Coal and Coal Chemistry of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences undertook rescue excavations on S...
Adaptive Planning for Resilient Coastal Waterfronts
Adaptive Planning for Resilient Coastal Waterfronts
Many delta and coastal cities worldwide face increasing flood risk due to changing climate conditions and sea level rise. The question is how to develop measures and strategies for...
Conurban
Conurban
Conurbation [f. CON- + L. urb- and urbs city + -ation] An aggregation of urban areas. (OED) Beyond the urban, further and lower even than the suburban, lies th...
African American Humor
African American Humor
The sophistication of the African American humor tradition testifies to its centrality in African American culture. Since its initial emergence in the contexts of enslavement, wher...
African American Deathways
African American Deathways
This bibliography on African American deathways examines the role of death, dying, and disposal from a variety of different perspectives. Studies focusing on the intersection betwe...
CHRISTIAN BURIAL GROUNDS OF UPLAND DAGESTAN (BASED ON THE JOINT DAGESTAN-GEORGIAN ARCHEOLOGICAL EXPEDITION)
CHRISTIAN BURIAL GROUNDS OF UPLAND DAGESTAN (BASED ON THE JOINT DAGESTAN-GEORGIAN ARCHEOLOGICAL EXPEDITION)
The paper proposes material of the study of medieval burial grounds of upland Dagestan, obtained during the joint Dagestan-Georgian archeological expedition, which was carried out ...

Back to Top