Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Thu, 10 Nov 2011 06:32:48 -0800 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
I forgot to mention it was the town of Cahawba, Alabama. Linda gave a talk
on her research in the first symposium on gender research in HA that I
organized for the Chacmool conference, and her paper is in the proceedings
and I can send you a copy of that if I'm wrong about it being a chapt. in
the Deetz volume, tho I think that's correct.
Are you doing some related research?
regards,
suzanne
On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 8:29 PM, Robert L. Schuyler
<[log in to unmask]>wrote:
> I think that is the article. I will check it out. thanks, Bob
>
>
> At 08:48 PM 11/9/2011, you wrote:
>
>> Hi Bob, you would be interested in Linda Derry's chapter about the
>> influence of women's kinship relationships on the location of the houses
>> and stores owned by their husbands. I think it is in the Deetz feshrift.
>> regards,
>> suzanne
>>
>> On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 5:36 AM, Robert L. Schuyler
>> <[log in to unmask]>wrote:
>>
>> > Can anyone help me relocate a source? It is an article in an edited
>> > compendium on historical archaeology and the author is a woman. It is an
>> > impressive archival analysis of kinship. The author was looking at
>> feuding
>> > - I think in the US Southeast - in which people were fighting or killing
>> > each other and their acts did not make sense until she shifted the
>> analysis
>> > from the family names (male) to the the maiden names of the women
>> involved.
>> > Suddenly all sorts of relationships became visible.
>> >
>> > What is this source?
>> >
>> > Has this author published other items on this "hidden" pattern?
>> >
>> > Are their similar articles by historical archaeologists or historians
>> > which dig deeper into kinship relationships/
>> >
>> > thanks,
>> >
>> > Bob Schuyler
>> >
>>
>
|
|
|