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Beloved Things: Interpreting Curated Pottery in Diasporic Contexts.

Shannon CowellKelly Jenks
Published in: International journal of historical archaeology (2020)
Historical archaeologists often view curated or heirloom pottery as a frustrating anomaly in the dating of historical-period sites or contexts. Fewer pause to consider why the artifacts were curated in the first place, or what their presence reveals about the people who maintained them. Drawing on a case study of curated micaceous pottery at a Hispanic diaspora site in east-central New Mexico, this article argues that investigation of heirloom pottery can offer insights into the functional, familial, and cultural significance of these beloved things.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • cone beam