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Archaeological Approaches to New World Plantation Slavery Author(s): Charles E. Orser Jr. Source: Archaeological Method and Theory, Vol. 2 (1990), pp. 111-154 Published by: Springer Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20170206 . Accessed: 04/12/2013 15:05 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Springer is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Archaeological Method and Theory. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 4 Approaches Archaeological to New World Plantation Slavery E . ORSER, CHARLES has Slavery years, even many resulted person raphies show scholars interested the time in a body could ever during of literature JR. and for thinkers social of its existence. interest This has slavery so vast that no single on the subject. Bibliog written read everything and sociologists have that historians, anthropologists, about and cross-cul theoretical, important prepared many ethnographic, tural studies of slavery and 1977, 1980, 1981, 1985; Miller (seeMiller Appleby 1987; Miller and Borus 1980; Miller and Brown 1982a, 1982b, 1983a, 1983b;Miller and Skalnik 1985, 1986). interest twenty quickly the lead of these scholars have also begun slave sites. This slavery and to excavate is fairly recent, and the archaeology of slavery is only about the old. of slave sites is years Nonetheless, investigation a within historical contemporary assuming prominent place Archaeologists following to think seriously about archaeology. The purpose of this chapter is to explore the current research direc tions of the archaeology of slavery. The expansive spatial distribu a narrow tion and considerable time depth of slavery necessitates on the emphasis here is the excavation of slave sites in scope. Thus, in two of the five the New World, ine slave societies?the southern (Finley 1980:9)?with States. The focus is on Americans in the New cans. Even with these so-called genu regions containing States and the Caribbean United on the southeastern concentration United the enslavement World, restrictions not of Africans on slavery the coverage and African among Native Ameri of this chapter cannot be truly exhaustive. Ill This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 112 Charles E. Or ser, Jr. Slavery with Defining Relevance Archaeological in many di forms in many different Slavery has appeared so in times and and many times; fact, places, disparate places it to be "nothing notably pecu that one prominent scholar considers verse review 1982:vii; but cf. Finley 1976:819). A cursory reveals that slavery has been variously defined. As their areal and temporal of slave have expanded coverage either have defined societies, slavery particularistically they liar" (Patterson of the literature scholars holding in ways sense that make for the specific sociohistorical formation have definition the they ignored altogether, with study, is. knows what that everyone apparent already assumption slavery to define in broad of the hesitation much slavery Paradoxically, or else under terms stems its myriad from historical and cultural forms (Davis 1984; Finley 1960, 1980;Kolchin 1986;Miers and Kopytoff 1977; Pat terson fined labor de ed. 1980). Nonetheless, slaves are generally 1982; Watson, or capture, whose as people acquired by purchase originally is forcibly appropriated and who forever remain "outsiders," their owner's kin group. Slaves thus share a special relation beyond is the institutionalization of and slavery their masters, ship with social these 1982:13; Watson (Patterson relationships complex 1980:8). In view of the many definitions of slavery that have been proposed, it might be concluded that New World archaeologists reasonably or that have particular of slavery have devised adapted definitions however, most archaeologists meaning. Regrettably, archaeological silent on this topic. In order to evade the have been surprisingly have chosen many definition, archaeologists of slave material definitions. enumerative, Descriptions descriptive in the culture often are used as surrogate definitions, apparently a definition will relevant that working hope through description knotty problem emerge. One of of this agenda has been that no clear, archaeolog consensus in has developed definitional explicit one archaeologist maintains that of slavery. Thus, result ically meaningful, the archaeology into three groups"?house "sorted slaves the "nature" of slavery had its of which and field craft hands?each servants, specialists, ever indicating own material this "na culture, without exactly what in terms of is (Kelso 1984:102-3). Another defines slavery while others rather vague "status" patterns (Otto 1980, 1984:11-16), ture" This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New World Plantation 113 Slavery refer to slavery as "the form of social control and economic exploita tion of non-European workers of the British Caribbean characteristic and American South during and Handler the seventeenth cen to nineteenth lack of explicit defini 1985:15). This a true in element par key understanding, exegesis, perhaps to accounts attributed for the "careless tially correctly scholarship" and Pe?a much of the archaeology of slavery 1988:154). (Pe?a to provide a It might be argued that the failure of archaeologists turies" (Lange tional the immaturity of slavery simply represents definition In other words, that stating slavery represents special forms of social control and exploitation may be all that should now area of within this developing be asked of archaeologists working be the fail this defense may reasonable, inquiry. Although scholarly ure of archaeologists to define terms cost in has material slavery good working of the field. and historians, nonarchaeologists, notably theoretical of the their serious, severely hampered development a lack of rigor. To be a successful field by almost institutionalizing them credibility among has to knowledge, the archaeology of New World slavery more than just the excavation and description of encompass sites and slave material of slavery must culture. A definition contributor must slave be constructed specifically with a definition in mind, archaeology rigorous but is also archaeologically that is not only sociohistorically It does little good for archaeologists form of mental for example, without cruelty, measures the material of that cruelty. Thus, relevant. to portray slavery an understanding the initial task as a of to be in the understanding of the archaeological manifesta accomplished a to tions of New World is within definition slavery provide working a thoughtful must framework. This framework be conceptual on as the the conditions focused material of reflec explicitly slavery tion of its social, political, and ideological conditions. one more one such framework, Before providing condition definition World must slavery, be made Within explicit. the principal focus here is not considered. Although the areal confines of this of New is on plantation slavery. research archaeological et al. has been conducted (see, for example, Owsley et al. Zierden and 1985, 1987; Rosengarten 1987; Singleton 1984; most Calhoun Zierden has and urban been preliminary, 1984; 1986), Urban slavery on urban slavery has not been amajor of slavery. The topic in the archaeology on of research overwhelming majority slavery has oc archaeological curred at rural plantation sites. slavery This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 114 E. Or ser, Jr. Charles focus on plantations does not solve the problem of definition. is intensified the contrary, the problem because scholars have to define found it difficult for the same reasons "plantation" they A On have found it hard to agree on a definition of "slavery." Plantations times and places, and some plan had many different forms at various tations did not even use slave labor (Craton 1984; Hart 1982:1; Mintz or es referred to planting the word plantation 1978:82). Originally, tablishing even anything, English Dictionary vides churches (Thompson (Oxford University 1986:2). The Oxford Press 1971:2198) still pro this definition. In the light of the special perspectives can definition of the plantation able an accept of archaeologists, Six defining be constructed. Merle Prunty by geographer characteristics, proposed originally for archaeological research (Orser (1955) and revised specifically a to this have relevance. definition, 1984:1-2), According particular a must have the elements: deemed landholding plantation following its region, large within management, social relations a relatively large input an archaeologically characteristics between labor and geared production that reflects centralized off con From these toward specialized agricultural pattern sale, a settlement plantation trol, and of power of cultivating power. relevant definition can be con a plantation for agricultural is a tract of land used primarily that has discrete pattern or spatial limits, a settlement production a as to economic in maximize and at such way production, ganized structed: least two classes who maintain This who work and those who of people?those a unique set of social relations. definition life?its emphasizes and spatial the social internal aspects characteristics?and direct? of plantation deempha the and place within productivity also emphasizes that a plantation This definition world's economy. can be conceptualized as a bounded and that "site," archaeologists and workers between should plantation study the social relations its special external plantation owners sizes analysis, these nature?its as they were social relations enacted made within plantations this site. In the final what they were (Mandle 1972:57-58; Wolf 1959:136). on planta relations ignored slave-master but archaeolo these relations may be self-evident), not the them have prominence they deserve. given gists generally in almost of have Most solely plantations thought archaeologists in market environments terms of their external rather than relations Archaeologists tions (after all, have not This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New Plan ta tion Slavery World 115 ar relations. their internal, Thus, intraplantation considering as enter "an have the defined agricultural chaeologists plantation a number to of workers of a subordinate class work prise in which a crop for someone to produce else to be sold in a market" gether also 1985:1), (Singleton 17). Such definitions economic function and as "an agricultural (Adams 1987:9, factory" on the external, place too strong an emphasis in market societies and too little of plantations on the internal, emphasis within those economics. social relations created by and embedded a major source of comprise These ad artifacts, which interre via international, Itmust be kept in mind that artifacts information for archaeological research. to plantations market routes, were used on plantations intraregional a social environment that necessarily involved slave-master found mittedly their way and gional, within relations. Thus, when archaeologists of what they see are the material some recover results internal artifacts, plantation of, on the one hand, and explicitly social), relations plantation (intraplantational relations and, on the other hand, external plantation a complex marketing Both material within network). (as they existed aspects of plan not be disregarded in favor of are important, and one should the other. Still, foremost attention, perhaps, tations because internal relations, tied to the particular sociohistorical ward they will aspects should be directed been most have of the "site" under to firmly study (Orser 1988c). Archaeologists to work. Although should remember that slaves were at plantations to an owner in soci slaves could provide prestige of slaves was to perform function labor. It ety at large, the primary can be said, therefore, that plantations consisted of two fundamental owners or slave hirers) and direct owners classes: (planters?slave (slaves). One producers beyond what was needed group performed labor, labor far surplus for survival, while the other appropriated it (Resnick andWolff 1982:2). was the planter's and the planter plantation "power domain," a class formed (after Mills "power elite" 1956). The planter's power included making decisions opera important regarding plantation on or to act his her and tion, empowering agents behalf, controlling The the acquisition, The plantation. tion where of use, and maintenance of material on the objects also a manifesta to slaves was of work assignment the planter's power. He or she decided who would work, and how long they would work. Planters they would work, This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 116 used ers E. Orser, Charles their material Jr. possessions?animals, their relentless themselves?in tools, land, and the work for luxury" "quest (Nowak a hierarchy and maintained of also established 1983:75). Planters to further plantation work meant (Olson 1983). production A white in observer 1860 that reported planters grouped into two categories?house servants and field hands?based location general slaves on the of their existed hierarchy slave individuals. A secondary labor (Hundley 1860:351-52). each group to differentiate further between commentator stated that slaves sought better within This ac because hierarchy planters generally to house servants. Thus, late ante among prestige bellum house servants in the South, the "chief ambition" of the men was or valet") "to become master's female slaves waiting-man, within the work positions corded the most to become wanted chy were groom, the "lady's maid." chambermaid, and wagoner. housekeeper, carriage driver, to be particularly posed Slaves who Other positions in the hierar steward, dining-room The last two positions prestigious. in amanner consistent servant, were sup stan the planter's of money, might gifts, spe extra clothing, cial dinners and dances, of food, greater allocations to town and trips Breeden 1979:292; (Blassingame 1980:257-65). to the planter's Slaves who did not conform standards could be de dards moted vants could worked be rewarded. the task hierarchy. Accordingly, recalcitrant house ser some time the benefit their "for of health" spend within might (Hundley 1860:358) alongside sold away from their homes, tions of the planter-imposed the power Nonetheless, Slaves held some measure theft, the field hands. also might be for extreme viola Slaves family, and friends work standards. by planters was not absolute. of power over their owners by the very the labor for their owner's quest for luxury. fact that Slaves with consist Rewards exercised they supplied could express their power running away, or rebellion, in direct actions, such as sabotage, and in less direct ways by malinger ing and pretending ignorance (Aptheker 1964, 1968; Cheek 1970; 1979; Heuman 1982; Genovese 1974:587-660, 1985; Okihiro most One the forms of slave resistance involved of ingenious 1986). counter to the institution of a hierarchy of work that ran directly that enforced by planters. Craton In this slave-constructed were those needs of fellow ranked hierarchy, lowest slaves, slaves Those by planters. as healers, preachers, in the highest people who positions served the and entertainers, This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions or who New World Plantation Slavery 117 were highest Those slaves in the hierarchy. cruel drivers, of the planter family?servants, Arti in the slave hierarchy. and willing lowest concubines?were and physically sans, compassionate drivers, gifted field hands oc could the master fool saw to the needs who intermediate 1976). (Blassingame positions of slave plantation the brief examination suggests complexity it. indicates of social relations within and the importance cupied This life Greater is introduced the role of plan and intermediaries?overseers, drivers, agents, managers?in of plantation social life. The view the organization and maintenance as comprising of a plantation social classes defined on the basis of a to plantation and operation within their relation production complexity by also considering tation bounded, spatial universe provides as direct Slaves, ological analysis. series of social relations that were a useful for archae perspective a within functioned producers, given daily material expressions. in all their complexity and interconnec expressions, are to For archaeolo accessible tedness, archaeologists. potentially definition of slavery might be a sociohistorical gists, then, a working condition that leaves material evidence of the subservient work posi These material cultural origins and traditions, and subor tions, diverse non-Western a to its dinate social roles of members when class of people compared re in positions of authority and power. The goal of archaeological search is to identify and understand to its theoretical use, these material expressions. also can serve an are slave plantation inhabitants function. When important heuristic classified into two major groups, in at least slavery can be explored on the three ways: focused on the dominant focused (owner) class, or on dominated focused both classes. (The lat (slave) class, equally In addition this framework ter focus as well.) in the analysis includes intermediaries generally The viewpoints used for each can be termed the supraordinate per the subordinate and the dialectical perspec spective, perspective, The future of the archaeology of slavery lies in the tive, respectively. pursuit promise of all perspectives, but appears in the latter. The erally Supraordinate perhaps the greatest interpretive Perspective who first examined slave plantations gen Archaeologists viewed the eyes of planter elites. As a result, them through This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 118 E. Or ser, Jr. Charles mansions and their support buildings attracted attention plantation during the earliest days of plantation archaeology. in planter This overwhelming interest elites received theoretical in J.C. Harrington's justification one of the first article providing influential (1952) early and widely defenses of historical archaeology. with the National Park Service and a an archaeologist in the developing authority Harrington, leading that argued be termed field of historical archaeology, the archaeology of "people of European should origin" site archaeology." For him, the words "historic "historic site" "a specific evoked that formed and notable images of places or of the historical either of virtue of associated part record, itself, by or events on In his exposition 1952:336). (Harrington personalities" it "colonial made clear his that Harrington archaeology," (1952:336) interest was in those and often mythicized transplanted European a in Europe in order to colonists who left stable society" "relatively raise food, and fight Indians in the frontiers of the New build homes, as members World. Harrington did not mention Africans of these colonies. European In retrospect, Harrington's of historical archae conceptualization narrow. to To be his failure appears fair, however, ology remarkably mention in diverse cultural the many colo groups present Europe's a dominant nies was consistent national with that main ideology tained people were generally a "notable" part of the New World's past. of its now obvious shortcomings, Harrington's that slaves to be considered Even and other nondominant in spite for an elite-oriented justification holds not tacit an important archaeology In his the intellectual of historical place within history archaeology. one comment of the most that contributions made by the important was an over-all picture at Jamestown "in providing excavations of material wealth sanctioned to look and social status of the colonists," who would archaeologists plantation the big house for research material beyond those Harrington choose never (Harrington 1952:339). Many archaeologists were confined because who chose to confine themselves (or who to plantation big commitments) on nature of the the exclusively physical plan as the eventual reconstruction ters' buildings, usually with physical noted during the formative years of histor goal. As one archaeologist sites the craft of historic ical archaeology, "anyone who practices houses often of contract focused This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New World Plan ta tion Slavery 119 sooner or later" (Pow archaeology will be associated with restoration cases this kind of research demands the pains ell 1967:38). In most so common in for detail the Thus, example, taking archaeology. are reported at Shirley Plantation, Virginia, that measured from ap been three bricks wide, with bricks 8 to 8.5 inches long, from 3.75 to 4.5 inches wide, and proximately at from 1.875 to 2.24 thick the inches bricks (Reinhart 1984:5); outer walls of Hill House to have Plantation, Virginia, were in size (Watkins 1968:90). Mercer inches 8.5 by 2.75 approximately by 4.0 oriented however, anthropologically archaeologists ar statement in Harrington's that historical explicit to could be used understand wealth and social standing. Significantly, found comfort chaeology consistent This view, generally the day (Childe 1946; Hawkes with the archaeological wisdom of a or research 1954), provided agenda for material of wealth and afflu examples ganized around the search ence in the remains of slave owners' to many homes. This because search made sense were plantation archaeologists planters supposed to be wealthy. it has since been demonstrated Even though by his torians that not all slave owners fit the popular image of the rich the line of investigation continues planter, Harrington by suggested to be pursued. In fact, the search for indicators is a com of wealth excavate owners' of who slave homes. pursuit archaeologists for various reasons, have described only planter (Some archaeologists, mon material culture,- see Rockwell [1974]; Smith [1985]; and Watkins [1968].) to use their inves who have attempted of the archaeologists to understand mansions of plantation tigations planter society have searched for measures of something termed "socioeconomic vaguely status" For the most part, these archaeolo (L. Lewis 1985:121-22). Most between artifacts correlation and so gists have sought a one-to-one cial standing. A number of archaeologists have argued, therefore, at plantation that the presence of certain artifacts mansions (most can to kinds of be reflect the frequently special ceramics) presumed high data social with each For example, using assumed for planters. position usually from two sites in South Carolina, it has been argued that porce to both slave owners and slaves, should lain, having been available at archaeological have a differential distribution features associated locales the greatest class, with frequency (K. Lewis 1979:63; Lewis and Hardesty occurring 1979:48; at planter Lewis and This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 120 Charles E. Orser, Jr. of porcelain 1980:74). At both sites the "high" percentage one at at 20 the felt to percent (12 percent other) was plantation, were These reflect the planter's conclusions high social position. Haskeil on unstated based them the authors and in making assumptions, reuse practices such as lateral cycling (Schiffer an earlier, and disagreed with influential study that cultural disregarded 1987:28-35), that porcelain suggested may not be a "reliable of status indicator differences" (Otto 1977:106). "mugs or cups or study, the use of ceramics?those to have been broken and thrown away"?were that happened as markers of wealth. other material items? Instead, rejected sets of ceramics, monogrammed wine bottles, book clasps, "matched In another bowls thought jewelry, and coats of arms"?were wealth (Kelso 1984:205-6). In a similar vein, the authors of another "wealth relative of planter and gentility" items of such quantity to be better markers study maintain should be reflected families of that the "in the as tablewares, glassware, clothing, in the material cultural remains of their houses items" and personal et al. 1985:103-5). (Zierden Accordingly, 13 percent and 20 Carolina, porcelain at a plantation in South creamware in the percent and 16 percent 9 percent eighteenth-century deposits, porcelain creamware in the nineteenth-century and the presence of a deposits, a toothbrush, are thought to "reflect the and a compass hairbrush, of daily life" (Zierden et al. 1985:103). elegance is the lack these kinds of studies The most striking problem with in of the determination of variables wealth. Archaeolo of rigor used gists doing porcelain or whether these should studies be viewed quantitative offer few explicit as an indicator measures of this wealth have to explain why in past society been devised. in 12, 13, and 20 percent porcelain suggest wealth? By the same token, indicate of a coat of arms in a slave cabin deposit In other words, why should ceramic collections different would reasons of wealth 9, the presence wealth, theft, or a gift? Questions been addressed by archaeologists, such as these generally who and archaeologists not have look for in archaeological with associated slave-owning deposits see it L. Lewis find (but 1985). generally planters a too-simple view of past social Such analyses present usually 1987). Ar (Beaudry et al. 1983:22; Baugher and Venables complexity wealth caricature who use this approach chaeologists held trivialize the important power positions plantation by plantation This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions life and slave New World Plantation Slavery 121 owners to uni (Orser 1987b: 131), thus reducing plantation on a actors within slave dimensional society. By focusing solely owner's material these studies external possessions, emphasize owners at the expense of planta of the internal dynamics are those the most tion life. To date, perhaps analyses sophisticated on the meaning struc of planter settlement that have concentrated relations market ture 1979, 1985; Lewis and Haskell studies conducted all planter Significantly, on white Only when exclusively planters. (K. Lewis home 1980). to date have a black slave focused owner's is excavated?for Wisdom Ellison's well-documented example, William an in South Carolina (Johnson and Roark 1984)?will owners across a of slave wide sociohis understanding Hall archaeological torical spectrum mensions di such time, the material begin to emerge. Until owner life will be poorly understood. to various theoretical issues, another more practical of slave In addition to explain why many on have concentrated archaeologists of plantation slave owners' houses. Simply put, plan tation mansions in con and ideological have more physical visibility side exists the excavation temporary mansions, on many houses society because estates, continue veneration structures. do other plantation Plantation are the only remaining they frequently buildings are often the first sites to be studied. Many of these as residences or are the subject of to be occupied because sonalities" than of their association (Harrington habitation with "notable events and per 1952). feelings of reverence often pro coupled with reason to vide the main first turn their attention why archaeologists are frequently mansions: patronage. plantation Archaeologists Continued so excavation because strategies they depend sources. the of of Members their patronage strongly funding or even families who provide money locally prominent nationally are often primarily in the excavation for excavation of interested sites wherein their fame. Only the their ancestors lived and made restricted in their on most in funding the exca private patrons are interested enlightened of slave cabins, reminders those physical of their ancestors' role in perpetuating human of spon bondage. As a result, a number on sored excavations have concentrated almost the homes totally vation of slave owners support buildings et al. 1984; Lamb 1983; Orser Goodwin hart et al. 1984). is not to argue that any malicious This and and Gagliano 1977; 1987a; Reinhart 1984; Rein (Burden intent motivates This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions the con 122 E. Orser, Charles struction of these Jr. research designs. The ideology of slave plantations from derives, all, largely images of an idealized past. popular visions in crafted the planta Through carefully print and on film, of a large, stately mansion surrounded tion?composed by verdant after fields?becomes notable finite sources ology, generally and historic. Thus, private patrons, having the high cost of archae realizing to limited monies the excavation of what of funds and often not direct their to be the most they perceive important part of the plantation, the mansion. to the In addition restrictive of often dictates well-intentioned can be affected by the research designs private sponsors, plantation resource management con demands and requirements of cultural tracts. Although contract to planta research has been amajor benefit cases the requirements tion archaeology in many (Orser 1984:7-8), of contracts cases agency's tions, own even a focus dictate reason the for such internalization such though on the big house (Lees 1980). In many stems from the funding also emphasis of the popular about planta ideology a limited is not interest required by federal statute. The Subordinate Perspective about slavery gained exclusively from the ex Knowledge is necessarily of slave owners' houses one-sided and incom can be investigated abso with big houses plete. Because plantation is of slaves at all (Watkins lutely no mention 1968), little insight to realize that the best way to learn about the material condi needed cavation tions of slavery is to study sites directly slaves. This associated with most historians made realization, only after the Civil Rights by movement tradition of 1970), was based on an earlier (Genovese 1939). After the institutionali (see, for example, DuBois scholarship zation historians of social history, many however, began to study what have been called "bottom-rail people who were not people," famous or openly in the traditional, national ideol dominant are These Lytle 1982:172). generally people as "the inarticulate" (Ascher archaeology revered and ogy (Davidson in historical known 1974:11;Mead 1951). Archaeological grew in the late in those interest 1960s at the same bottom-rail slaves time called people that many historians began This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New World Plantation Slavery 123 to turn to the inarticulate the purpose of (Wood 1978). Interestingly, in States?at the slave United Kings archaeology systematic to pro Florida (Fairbanks 1974, 1983)?was designed ley Plantation, that could be used for the reconstruc information vide architectural the first of a slave cabin (Fairbanks 1984:2). The in the United States, then, was archaeology that has restorationist existed trend physical tion in general, cal archaeology specifically. The innovation and in relation first real plantation with the consistent histori throughout to planters' mansions in this research was to imagine that slave lifeways, not just architectural studied at Kingsley. A details, could be directly was of research the search for Africanisms? this guiding principle found in the New World survivals from Africa cultural (Herskovits was deemed a good plantation for this inquiry be 1930). Kingsley cause of its unique history: The owner's first wife was the daughter had been the and the plantation of an African chieftain, reportedly site of a slave tions of training research the school were (Fairbanks that slaves would 1974:63). The major assump arrived from Africa newly them as they culture with carry ideas about their material across the Atlantic, to traveled in bondage that they would attempt re-create in the New World, and of this material culture elements at creations their of these that they would evidence planta deposit tion homes. The ward: research design devised to locate Africanisms architectural the necessary providing elements of slave Africanisms while was straightfor details for the would be sought as well. Dur was made. an Even however, important discovery as was the been Plantation documented having though Kingsley no indisputable could home of newly arrived Africans, Africanisms In other words, be found in the archaeological examined. deposits even though African to be, extremely and continues culture was, sponsor, ing this research, to blacks in the New World 1987), the material (Stuckey in archaeologi for this culture may not be readily apparent cal deposits 1985:264). One piece of evidence (also see Armstrong a single glass bead originally to from another plantation, thought relevant evidence later the slave trade (Ascher and Fairbanks 1971:8), was as common one in New of beads the many just repudiated probably in historic times (Fairbanks 1974:90). World represent The greater intellectual than significance Within anticipated. of the the search intellectual for Africanisms atmosphere This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions was being 124 E. Orser, Charles Jr. at the time, with the development of society on and the proliferation of historical publications sur of slave lifeways?including African slavery, the documentation a topic of some importance. As historians vivals?became chroni in Western created awareness ethnic cled the lives of people who lived outside mansions plantation (e.g., Blassingame 1979; Craton 1978;Gutman 1976;Higman 1975, 1984; Joyner 1984; Rawick 1972), archaeologists to document the material conditions part felt compelled of slave lives to do their and Mullins-Moore 1980; McFarlane 1975; Otto (Fairbanks 1979; Singleton 1980). to be so underdeveloped continues This line of investigation that all archaeologists who work within slave quarters provide original about slave life. This research, although information frequently wide in scope, generally addresses three major topics: the use of material and slave health and diet. objects by slaves, slave housing, Slave Material All Culture archaeological vides significant Historians have within research conducted slave settlements pro new information about slave material possessions. excellent provided slave, and archaeologists ial detail on how slaves studies have it meant of what to provide unique the potential communities developed and adapted to be a mater their cultures to the New World (Kulikoff 1978;Mintz and Price 1976:7). Of all the lines currently being the manufacture some son plantations 1978; Henry bean of investigation pursued, perhaps of African-like the eastern into slave material possessions one of the most promising involves on called Colono ware, pottery, coast of the United States (Fergu along 1980; Lees and Kimery-Lees this 1973). Interestingly, 1979) and in the Carib African topic concerns (Mathewson in the design, retentions slaves and the part slaves played among and management of New World plantations. construction, In the American South most of this research has focused on the distribution of slave-made in vessel function changes to Native American pottery et al. thony pottery over time, in time and space, suspected of these wares and the affinities 1988; Wheaton 1986; Vernon (Anthony ware are now in use (An of Colono 1983:225-50). Typologies current into the and and research function, 1986), morphology, is similar of these wares sequence temporal ical research on prehistoric pottery. to earlier culture This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions histor New World Plantation Slavery 125 raises a of Colono ware on New World plantations presence some Were slaves of significant given specifically questions: Colono ware? What was the social standing of the task of producing What was their standing the slave community? these potters within The number slaves forced to produce task hierarchy? Were as after they had finished purely surplus production trade relations existed between tasks? What plantation within the planter's Colono ware their normal still Native Americans? These and nonplantation questions can answers be asked about require (Hill 1987). (Similar questions in the other Africanisms of African-made and the retention objects New World; for example, tobacco pipes in the Chesapeake [Emerson slaves 1988] and in Barbados [Handler 1983;Handler and Lange 1978:130 in Barbados 31], and necklaces Handleretal. 1979].) The manufacture sometime terminated of Colono before [Handler and Lange 1978:127-30; ware began sometime after 1680 and cen the fourth decade of the nineteenth Deetz the 1986:7-24; 1988:365). (Anthony Understanding in Colono is a of the development and decline dynamics production to it of the heart of the serious because goes topic worthy study tury question identified Using of social change within the slave quarters as it might be by archaeologists. and early-nineteenth materials from two mid-eighteenthin South have argued Carolina, archaeologists plantations century in Colono ware that the decline indicates over time et al. 1983; Wheaton (Wheaton a change in slave culture and Garrow 1985). Al increase alternate these authors explanations?an though provide in the plantations' of a resident the presence slave populations, owner at one of the plantations, of greater regi and the impressment on slaves through mentation favor accultura time?they generally in Colono ware production. tion as the explanation for the decrease In other words, slaves simply forgot or lost interest inmanufacturing ware as they became more Europeanized. The author of a recent study has questioned this interpretation, Colono a form of Colono ware represents arguing instead that the production in a realm controlled of resistance that is expressed by slaves, their ware to In this slaves used Colono view, foodways 1985). (Ferguson and maintain establish their cultural The author of separateness. another Colono under brief but of provocative study argues that the beginnings out occurred when black slaves moved from production the roofs of their owners and into separate cabins (Deetz 1988). ware This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 126 E. Orser, Charles Jr. but both provide studies require much more research, impor tant new ways to perceive of Colono ware within the the meaning and as an aspect of slave-master relations. slave community Both topic yet to be examined of slave material culture An important documentation slaves is the by archaeologists in systems that allowed some measure personal property and to develop as in St. such autonomy, Jamaica, Brazil, Domingue, coast of the United some parts of the southeastern States to accumulate of economic and along (Mintz 1955, 1978:92-95; Mintz and Hall I960;Morgan 1982:592 con 1986:775). Comparisons in such systems and those in harsher systems into the of life should provide slave fascinating insight variability New the World. throughout between 94, 1983; Kolchin of slaves ditions the material Slave Housing research Archaeological vide extensive tions. at slave houses information slaves were Because about not in the earliest has obvious life and slave to choose able to pro rela potential slave-master their own housing (ex size of slave cabins owners forced on their the colonial cept perhaps days), conditions reflects the daily material directly of extant slaves. In this regard, then, comparisons about slave housing is particularly with requirements planter statements the remains of actual slave These kinds of comparisons also enlightening. ar a significant statement about the need for methodological even in the presence of written documents. research chaeological for their knew that they should provide adequate houses Planters houses make slaves, houses that were well and reasonably heated, well ventilated, cabin size was only from 16 the recommended large. Nonetheless, by 18 feet (288 square feet) to 16 by 20 feet (320 square feet),with the smaller size thought to be adequate for a husband, or four small children (Butler 1851:327; Collins wife, and three 1854:423; Breeden 1980:114-39). that the range of slave cabin research demonstrates Archaeological vio slave owners sizes was actually and that variable many quite A number of small cabins have been lated these recommendations. excavated, 1987:173-85) sibly rebuilt ble-pen at Kings Bay Plantation, Florida (Adams almost 9 by 9 feet (81 square feet)?and pos measuring a dou to be almost 11 by 20 feet (220 square feet)?and including structure some 9 by 20 feet (180 square feet); at Kingsley This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Planta New World Plantation Slavery 127 the cabins of field hands were tion, Florida (Walker 1988:101), where 11 by 18 feet (198 square feet); and at Millwood South Plantation, et 13 Carolina where the cabins measured al. (Orser 1987:240), by 17 excavated cabins, however, were (221 square feet). Other larger at Ray field Plantation than the recommended size, as in Georgia, (18 feet by 18 feet, 324 square feet) (Ascher and Fairbanks 1971:8), Stafford Plantation (16 by 21 feet, 336 square feet) (Ehrenhard and Bullard 1981:33), and Cannon's Point (17 by 20 feet, 340 Plantation feet) (Otto 1984:38); and inVirginia at Shirley Plantation square (20 by 20 feet, 400 square feet) (Leavitt 1984:186). These cabin sizes become when slave family size and significant If an average figure of 5.2 slaves human space needs are considered. is accepted per dwelling 1974, 1:115), realizing (Fogel and Engerman is possible, that great variation then at the plantations mentioned have had 16 and 77 square feet of living space above, slaves would at Kings Bay and Shirley Plantations, If cubic available respectively. feet estimates would have are used contained then (Sutch 1976:297-98), 648 and 3,200 between cubic these cabins feet of available an eight-foot Since it has been esti space, assuming ceiling. 400 and 600 cubic feet of living that adults require between space, and that a child uses about half the living space of an adult (Sutch 1976), a family of two adults and two children would require not between and cubic feet of all of space. 1,200 1,800 living Clearly, living mated the excavated cabins plantation research into the effects cultural some cross fall into this range. Although are not completed, of overcrowding can have a that overcrowding have suggested on human of pathological and effects (Gove populations deva Hughes 1983). This is not to argue that slaves were hopelessly stated psychologically of their housing because but conditions, only that they may have suffered stress caused by the household crowding they endured. By the same token, groups under stress can become researchers number more united and cooperative as they turn to each other for support (Lanzetta 1955:40). a number to the synchronie In addition view of slave housing, of in slave housing For have been interested archaeologists dynamics. and Curriboo research at Yaughan example, archaeological planta tions in South Carolina pre-1740 trenches struction"; slave cabins were in a manner later, an interesting built with closely indicates cabins reminiscent were of West built with sequence of housing: set in posts spaced African "cob-wall more widely spaced This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions con posts 128 E. Orser, Charles set both in trenches and in individual on brick built Jr. and contained cabins were holes; and finally, brick fireplaces. The buildings piers to square and from from rectangular changed morphologically smaller (Wheaton et al. 1983:203 irregular to regular, and became and Garrow The average area of Wheaton 11, 338-39; 1985:244-48). was structures the frame the wall-trench 195.6 square feet, while also brick build 183.3 square feet. The one excavated averaged et al. 165 square feet (Wheaton contained termed an "office," structures ing, 1983:205). The archaeology tion of the chronie major search house diachronic define studies in slave the African-American contribution to plantation de it obvious that in the New World. velopment and Diet Slave Health the of plantation life. Both syn to have continue will of housing One line of re archaeology. important in plantation of Africanisms the documentation such research will 1988:355, 357), because (Singleton significance should be forms Results studies dimensions sociohistorical and further cannot be diminished, because one area in which is of slave housing plantation can make a major to the modern contribution concep of these importance the documentation of even excavation the earliest work of slave cabins on plantations could provide made information unique (Fairbanks 1983:24). As is true with hous can provide material in details seldom present ing, archaeologists are now stan written records. Studies of slave diet and subsistence about slave diet and health dard in all archaeological studies of slave quarters. (For good studies see Adams [1987:225-75]; Gibbs et al. [1980]; Reitz et al. [1985]; Reitz [1987];Walker [1985, 1988].)The significance of this research slaves of the kinds of animal populations a as meas to domestic of wild ratio the species exploited exploited, ure of slave foraging and self-sufficiency, the between the agreement was versus to perform what labor number of daily calories needed lies in the documentation stress placed on slaves as and the kinds of physical received, of malnutrition 1988). (see Kiple focuses extensive The most yet completed study of slave health at Newton on the skeletal Barbados series excavated Plantation, actually a result (Handler and Lange 1978). The topics studied issues of nutritional ing research effort include as part of this pioneer et stress (Corruccini This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New World Plantation Slavery 129 al. 1982, 1985; Handler and Corruccini and the identifica 1983,1986) tion of African-born of tooth mutilation slaves through the presence (Handler et al. 1982). avenues of research pursued Perhaps one of the most interesting with the Newton bones series skeletal at concentrations concerns to four times three the presence of lead in the in compara than greater mainland slave populations (Corruccini bly dated North American et al. 1986). Using a sophisticated etal. 1982, 1987; Handler combina tion of historical and scientific documentation proce laboratory dures, called colonial to suggest that a form of lead poisoning in which affected both blacks and whites were researchers able "dry bellyache," British settlements, tion of rum contaminated dence was caused by the consump probably The inci lead during its distillation. more have been wide among slaves may with of lead intoxication spread than is suggested had social and behavioral in the historical literature and may have that are yet to be fully understood. into the biological Such research of slavery demonstrates, history to be a slave on in the most it meant basic terms of daily life, what effects In addition, the plantations of the New World. because these re a content to age is searchers that "low skeletal lead relative suggest a powerful remains" indicator of African birth in the Barbadian (Cor ruccini et al. 1987:238), that might this kind of research provides demographic in the study of the retention and loss customs in the New World. of African These studies of slave life move historical toward an archaeology in of the nature of slave communities anthropological understanding information the New World. be used Each new from the bottom study of slavery viewed information In future for researchers. expands pool must it be that the remembered specter studies, however, or not, the of the slave owner is ever present. Whether acknowledged rail greatly all of these the slave owner cannot be completely The Dialectical Itwould that be overly the slave 15) has, tion. Historically that slaves were robbed of their eliminated from the analysis. Approach to argue, as Elkins (1959:103 a perfect totalitarian institu acts of resistance clearly demonstrate victims and that they were not totally simplistic was plantation documented not absolute self-esteem by slavery (Rawick 1972:9; Thorpe This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 1971). 130 At E. Orser, Charles the Jr. slaves were not factory workers. time, however, in a famous of slaves with factory laborers advanced same The equation study in a and of slavery and 1974, 1:203) Engerman reappearing (Fogel more recent archaeological than has been report (Adams 1987:9, 17) refuted Being a slave was not the (Gutman 1975:83-84). adequately how harsh a laborer's laborer, no matter towns and were in lived who company factory stores at inflated prices did in company forced to shop exclusively not have the same material constraints imposed upon them as did same as being an industrial life. Even workers cannot be of slave-master relations such, the significance the material of when aspects slavery in the considering slaves. As overlooked New World. to study Some archaeologists have sought and the material differences between relations slave-master to according plantation this South's concept. Using method, (1977) pattern archaeologists the artifacts excavated have classified from one site into South's arti classes to their supposed architec function?kitchen, activi tobacco and arms, clothing, ture, furniture, pipes, personal, the of ties?and the percentages then have compared groups with clear discrepancies between those in South's original patterns. When a new pattern are apparent, is created. the two sets of percentages to test. A num for others then becomes This new pattern available fact groups according a and analyzed: Pattern Slave Artifact 1980; Zierden (Moore 1981, 1985; Singleton a Pattern Artifact Slave and Calhoun Carolina (Garrow 1982; 1983); a et al. Wheaton Wheaton and Garrow 1985; 1983); Village Carolina ber of slave-related patterns have been identified the renamed Planter Pattern, (Jackson 1986); a Lowcountry a variant of the Carolina Rice Planter Profile (Jackson 1986); and an Slave Pattern Pattern termed Artifact Afro-Jamaican tentatively Pattern 1985). (Armstrong are intended These patterns ferences and similarities of plantation to provide in the material information culture such inhabitants. about the dif by various studies usually ignore the inter used groups Regrettably, and most authors uncritically adopt South's method, life in favor of rote pattern designation. of plantation nal relations as it relates South's the with concept, greatest problem Perhaps are a matter to is of scale: South's slave patterns studies, specifically not distinct meant to represent entire cultures, social classes (Orser 1989). For the most part, such pattern studies represent the chimera This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New World of analysis without 1988b). In reaction abandoned the pattern internal Plantation 131 Slavery a fact not lost on South the substance, (1988a, some archaeologists to this application, have a more in favor of detailed recognition analysis of dynamics of slave-master in sociohistorical relations terms 1987; Howson 1988; Orser (Anthony 1988c). influential studies to date of slave-master The most archaeological a white caste was In this model relations have used a caste model. oc caste, and various occupational positions re curred within each caste (Otto 1975, 1977, 1980, 1984). Whites, were members of the upper caste; blacks of occupation, gardless were caste. members of This model the lower also incorpo always dominant over a black rates a third caste, composed slave societies were common the American The South caste model at sites of free urban blacks. in the Caribbean (Foner 1970; Genovese has been used to examine with three plantation middle-class upper-caste, upper-class planters; and lower-class slaves?at seers); lower-caste, facts associated tation, Georgia sible "status" plantation members were "three-caste" 1974:328, 409). the distribution cities in of arti groups?upper-caste, intermediaries (over Point Plan Cannon's three pos 1975, 1977, 1980, 1984). Accordingly, to that differentiate worked principles people on the (Otto a "racial/legal free caste (planters identified: of the white, of the black, unfree status" that differentiated bers agers (planters), "elite/subordinate Such and in some supervisors status" status" that distinguished and overseers) from mem (slaves); a "social or occupational different kinds of laborers?man (overseers), and laborers (slaves); and an caste between that distinguished between (overseers and slaves) (Otto 1980:8, elites (plant ers) and nonelites 1984:15-16). In these analyses, and in others like them, these "status principles" serve as a guide for examining artifact collections from various plan tation contexts. The "racial/legal status" is indicated when a similar the planter and overseer and artifact ity appears between samples, where both appear different from the slave sample, and the "white exists. The status" dominance ap pattern" "social/occupational is indicated when all three arti pears and the "hierarchical pattern" fact samples are different; when the planter sample is different from both the overseer and the slave samples, which in turn are similar, an status" is revealed, "elite/subordinate and the "wealth-poverty pat tern" appears (Otto 1984:15-16). At Cannon's Point Plantation, hous to reflect "racial/legal ing and liquor bottles were status," thought This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 132 E. Orser, Charles ceramic forms were seemed to reflect Jr. seen to reflect both "social "racial/legal" status," and food remains sta and "elite/subordinate" tuses (Otto 1980:9). that status is a highly many archaeologists acknowledge was a compli status theoretical issue, and that patterning complex cated affair in plantation society, status analyses (guided by the Can Although non's Point far beyond plantation research) have gained prominence Branstner Martin for and 1987; Scott (see, example, archaeology status analysis 1989). The most widely adopted aspect of caste-based to the distribution of ceramics. pertains and differences Obvious quantitative appeared among qualitative con at distributions and slave-owner the ceramic slave, overseer, texts at Cannon's amounts Point Plantation. Different and propor context. in tions of ceramic occurred each Whereas 1,242 styles sherds were found covered from overseer context. in the slave-owner the slave context. re 543 sherds were context, were 179 sherds found in the Only 21, 14, and 77 percent of the slave, over Similarly, were ceramic slave-owner transfer samples, respectively, seer, and ceramics for 29, 36, and 9 percent of accounted printed; undecorated ceramics the slave, overseer, and slave-owner (Otto 1977:115). The reasons was to the for of this these differences. analysis explain goal Since a well-documented sociohistorical framework for plantation both slaves and (one in which their important slave though master it be relations were disguised by the vague term "status"), to consider how slaves had came central to the logic of the analysis had been constructed by Otto had a prominent place, even slavery owners their acquired ceramics. (Colono ware was not found in the slave context [Otto 1984:84].) To the question of ceramic three acquisition by slaves, ceramics their from formulated: slaves obtained (1) hypotheses wares for slaves their owners, who purchased them; (2) specifically ceramic from their owners received discards (in effect, no special address were wares were chased their specifically purchased own ceramics with for slave use); and (3) slaves pur money they had earned on their own. An vessel of ceramic surface decoration, shape, and analysis that the slaves may have showed vessel form (shape and decoration) owners and also may for their received them by pieces purchased Further have bought some of their own ceramics (Otto 1977:94-101). analysis suggested that ceramic shape and form reflected This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions "social/ New World Plantation Slavery 133 ceramic surface decoration reflected status," while occupational status" "elite/subordinate (Otto 1980, 1984). influenced Archaeologists slavery were greatly studying by these and similar studies have among easily replicated analyses, examined, size and material other topics, the relationship between plantation culture the relationship between architecture in and the ceramic usage (Michie 1987), standing change over time (Armstrong con will undoubtedly 1985). Archaeologists in their studies of plantation tinue to use this kind of analysis slav (Moore 1981, 1985), and social has two major drawbacks ery, even though its uncritical acceptance use of the word that cannot be ignored: the uninformed "status," of race and class. and the confused conflation to provide an have been reluctant archaeologists not of have been equally "status," explicit although they a For in about the word. shy using example, study of rural life on Daniel's "socioeco Island, South Carolina, Drucker (1986) mentions vs. nomic status "elite low distributions of tableware and status," Many plantation definition utilitarian what ceramics," "status" means; trends," but never defines exactly uses occupa similarly Michie (1987:141-44) a sole indicator of so slave?as overseer, and "status tional "statuses"?planter, cial standing, but he never explains in an effort them. Other scholars, to be more explicit, use historical definitions of planter status based (Adams 1987; Moore largely on slave and land ownership 1981). as a collection is perhaps best understood of rights and a person's to individual and used given represent expression a in social situation position particular (Linton 1936:113). Because status is so dynamic, a has number of statuses, each of everybody at different which is expressed times depending upon the nature of Status duties the specific interaction. interpersonal Any one slave on a plantation of statuses, have had a number but many of these statuses on the plantation. would never have gained expression For example, a slave newly the status from Africa might have of acquired not this would while he status, being ascribed, "brother"; change would never be lived at a plantation, but it could be unimportant and might one on to be of his siblings happened the same plan expressed unless tation. Even if this were the case, however, the status "brother" would social "social or slave-overseer in the slave-master be insignificant most What would be be a slave's important would (after Goodenough persona" 1965), that is, all those statuses probably situation. This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 134 Charles united E. Orser, Jr. or slave-overseer for the slave-master interaction. For a slave statuses: this social persona might consist of the following individual At time and another the social man, worker, cooper. persona might consist of father, husband, member of congregation, and penitent In an urban setting the status "black" might be the only to white In of significance dwellers. any case, those ar city on caste of who the model 1987; chaeologists slavery (Michie rely a slave as black Moore 1981; Otto 1975, 1984) tend to perceive (a believer. status status), field racial/legal member of a subordinate hand (a social/occupational (an elite/subordinate status), and group status). seems to provide a logically elegant At first glance the caste model to view slave society. Its conflation of the external and way in which internal model cause dimensions of plantation however, slavery, for current archaeological potentially devastating of its primary reliance on race; that is, a person because social hierarchy place in this plantation of studies characteristics. slavery Comparative race (defined here as phenotypic characteristics) Inmany of some slave systems. element systems, makes research this be a is accorded of his or her racial demonstrate that was an important race was however, one survey found that slaves and mas For example, important. as being within ters were perceived of the same race in 75 percent examined the cultures (Patterson 1982:176). as an important race was perceived In the New World, aspect of con can no without be and sociohistorical analysis society, complete was an Race its 1983:21). (Fields 1982:143-44, importance sidering not initial criterion important New World. A racial work "to match the economic division" (Higgs 1978:89), on the plantations of the in order established agenda was generally racial of labor with a corresponding division of classification wherein whites would attend to the tasks labor. the manual blacks performed while or over could be violated arrangement by black planters in the other way: Whites could not seers, but it could not be violated a to be A holder could be assumed be slaves. black slave slave, but a to be To be a slave meant white farmer could never be so mistaken. requiring This neat responsibility, as belonging to the black race. perceived criterion who use caste as a primary On one level, archaeologists cor are classes slave plantation between for distinguishing partially found on slave plantations rect: those small, often square buildings as being members were of who did house perceived people probably the black race. Only historical research, however, can reveal whether This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New the slave owner was World Plantation Slavery as being a member of the white Because for problems archaeologists. perceived 135 race. race significant a not is an ideological and construct, fact, the necessarily physical use of racial designations on context of the sociohistorical depends Race presents their use (Altschuler 1982; Fields 1982;Omi andWinant 1986).When use race as a major classification, analytic they archaeologists and confuse obscure the economic function of the slave plantation its external base in the internal organization of the plantation with at large (Orser 1988c). As a result, when archaeologists to study racism and racist ideology along with archaeological how hard remains, separate class from race no matter they cannot their intentions be (Babson try or how honorable might they may society choose 1988:90-91). should however, Archaeologists, One ideology at plantations. not abandon of the sources the study of racist of information archaeolo an understanding to develop examine of the role racism gists may in is the dis have social relations may structuring plantation played tance between and their places the houses of plantation inhabitants lived in separate of work. On large plantations slaves commonly quarters some distance from on their owner's to the work house. This distance de site?as the proximity be expected might owner surveillance economic and function?but given a plantation's in structuring control were also important spatial design. plantation noted that slave cabins should be near observers Contemporary pended to observe to the planter's "conve house for the planter . . .what passes among them (Le Page du Pratz niently [the slaves]" mansion of within distance" the 1975:381), "calling plantation so "the white folks could close that and (Rawick 1977, 6:179), enough enough get to them [house Institute 1945:13). slaves] easy if they wanted to" (Social Science reasons for Other comments, suggest some noneconomic however, on plantations. a For example, the placement of slave settlements who said that the house servants' cabins former slave from Tennessee were located also said that to provide the planters wanted in order to the planter easy access family so the slave cabins whitewashed "to keep [them] from spoiling the looks of the big house" (Social 1945:13). In a particularly enlightening an eighteenth-century stated that slave cabins observer to keep located far enough away from the owner's home Science Institute from being offensive. By offensive he meant comment, should be the slaves "the smell which This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions is nat 136 E. Orser, Charles Jr. to some nations of negroes, such as the Congos, the Angolas, the Aradas, and others.... The negroes that have the worst smell are Pratz those that are the least black" du Com (Le Page 1975:381-82). ural ments such reasons were slave as these economic and noneconomic considered determined where imply that both when planters be located. cabins would plantation and others have demonstrated that the study of Anthropologists and informa space, called proxemics (Hall 1963), can be interesting tive. In the course of thinking about the spatial nature of human it has been argued settlement, concerns not the least of which that space can be used in many ways, allocation, control, and the policing of social classes these last (Lefebvre 1979). The study of space with can be termed "social proxemics" issues in mind (Orser 1988a:83). Because of the unique spatial character of their research universes and they maintain relationship have been able archaeologists with the special historical measurements between between slaves' in Studies quarters Jamaica the homes and their work 1986, (Higman historical to provide of slave owners locations South 1987), exact records, distance and slaves, and on plantations. Carolina (Orser 1988a, 1988b;Orser andNekola 1985), and Florida (Adams 1987:313 14) have important offered factor Some plantations. to place of work was that proximity in determining the placement of slave quarters an evidence studies have shown that the distances on between and places of work grew larger after villages, planter houses, worker and Nekola the abolition of slavery 1987; Orser 1985). (Higman of plantations?their the spatial economies forms, mean Clearly, ings, and changes?deserve much more intensive archaeological study. Conclusion Since the late 1960s historical have made archaeologists in providing material information about New progress significant In excavating of slaves and slave masters, the houses World slavery. a rare into plantation have daily life. archaeologists glimpse provided a weak the archaeology of slavery had theoretical Unfortunately, start not matured will come, perhaps, quickly. Maturity more of and ways rigorous explicit archaeologists adopt masters and between slaves. the measuring relationships dynamic and has when This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions New World Plantation Slavery 137 are necessarily internal because relations they were uni the and within bounded material upon expression given a to in the relations of understand inherent Thus, plantation. turn their analyses must to the interactions, archaeologists Slave-master acted verse these inner of plantation life. Archaeological studies of the dynamics too in have been external of class studies focus; planter generally slave communities have often been incomplete and one-sided. also must Archaeologists expand their studies into colonial slavery in order to develop a firm understanding of the complete sociohistor ical character must in of New World slavery. This understanding clude of the earliest studies Americans time of the enslavement of Native history in the New World At the same (Usner 1979). must their also theoretical archaeologists sharpen and Africans historical on slavery and begin to look seriously at both the theory perspectives of slavery and the cross-cultural of slavery (Padgug 1976). expressions New who have World studied Archaeologists slavery have made contributions significant tions of human bondage. to knowledge This knowledge about extends the material to issues condi of slave of material settlement resistance, culture, production avenues and slave-master relations. of dynamics, Many inquiry are as to be followed, and stretch the limits of their yet archaeologists health, new questions be asked about, for example, understanding, might the role of racism in structuring be life; the relationship plantation tween plantations and their physical the geography (Pulsipher 1982); material of a slave-owner aspects of the development (a line ideology of investigation receiving increasing 1985; Issac 1982] and by archaeologists and the impact slaves had on building attention by historians [Breen Sorenson 1984; [Leone 1987]); and maintaining the societies of their bondage. The development and growth of the archaeology a promising in the 1970s and 1980s has provided of slavery begin concentration within historical ning to an expanding archaeology. The archaeology of slavery will in importance surely mature to ask questions of increasing complexity learn practitioners as its and sophistication. Acknowledgments of people provided information about their re E. Babits, David W Babson, Kenneth M. Lawrence A number search, including: This content downloaded from 128.230.234.162 on Wed, 4 Dec 2013 15:05:42 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 138 E. Orser, Charles Jr. Brown, Robert Dirks, Lesley M. W Higman, M. Lydia Pulsipher, and Martha Zierden. Their kind Drucker, Edward assistance S. Handler, Barry Michael Staski, Trinkley, is greatly appreciated. In Jerome this chapter has benefited addition, greatly from the careful reading P. Leone, and penetrating Mark of Jerome S. Handler, questions B. C. 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