Buch, Englisch, 358 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 210 mm x 280 mm, Gewicht: 1318 g
Buch, Englisch, 358 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 210 mm x 280 mm, Gewicht: 1318 g
ISBN: 978-94-6426-101-1
Verlag: Sidestone Press
Development on the islands dating back to the 17th century has resulted in the loss of much of the earlier heritage, with a rate of destruction that has only increased in recent decades as a result of both human activity but also global climate change, seeing rising sea levels and ever-more violent storms. In this context, it is important to take stock of the islands’ surviving Lucayan heritage, and integrate it back into the narratives of the past. Many of the most elaborate artefacts ever found on the islands – including a number of wood carvings – have not been recovered from archaeological excavations, but rather as a result of early guano mining and cave exploration. This has led to them often being marginalised, reinforcing an impression of a comparatively ‘simple’ Lucayan society.
A central tenet of the book is that this impression is mistaken, and that the Lucayans had a rich material culture and were active participants in social, economic and political exchanges with the larger islands of the Greater Antilles. By integrating these legacy collections with a historiography of archaeological investigation in the region, the volume addresses topics ranging from the first occupations on the islands, to an island-by-island review of finds and settlements, and a consideration of Lucayan lifeways. Further, it explores some of the new directions this heritage is taking through the work of contemporary Bahamian and TCI artists.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Foreword: Kim Outten Stubbs, Director, National Museum of The Bahamas (AMMC)
Donald H. Keith, Turks and Caicos National Museum Foundation Board of Directors
1. The cultural legacies of the Lucayans
1.1 Lucayan: some definitions
1.2 The setting
1.3 The impact of history on prehistory
1.4 The dispersal of Lucayan cultural heritage
1.5 Local museums, local interest?
1.6 Heritage protection
2. Lucayan prehistory: current understandings
2.1 Chronologies and migrations: Lucayan archipelago in a circum-Caribbean context
2.2 Settlements: the world in one village (or two)
2.3 Socio-political organisation and trade
2.4 Life, death, afterlife
3. Collectors, Collections and the early years of Lucayan archaeology: a brief history (1780-1950)
3.1 Explorations 1850-1900: Frith, Murphy, Blake, Brooks
3.2 Investigations 1900-1959: de Booy, Rainey, Krieger, Goggin, Granberry
3.3 Archaeological investigations from the 1960s onwards: a brief introduction
4. Island archaeologies
4.1 The northern Islands
4.2 The central Islands
4.3 The southern Islands
5. Material culture
5.1 Lucayan ‘art’? Lucayan aesthetics
5.2 Bodies adorned
5.3 The ephemeral arts: fibres and textiles
5.4 A forest for wood carving
5.5 The emergence of Palmetto Ware
5.6 Stone tools: forms, functions and facilitators
5.7 Petroglyphs
6. Histories
6.1 Columbus in The Bahamas: 12 to 27 October 1492
6.2 European trade goods
6.3 The colonial period: charted islands, enslaved bodies
6.4 Lucayan adaption, resistance and persistence
6.4.3 Survivors of the slave raids: Catalinica, Beatrizica and the pearl divers (post-1538)
6.5 Lucayans in national identity
References
Appendix: Lucayan collections in international museums
Index