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Expressing Ideology Without a Voice, or Obfuscation and the Enlightenment Export

International Journal of Historical Archaeology, Vol. 1, No. 3. (1 September 1997), pp. 225-241.

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19c class emulation

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The consumer culture produced by the Industrial Revolution obfuscates diversity in the archaeological record. Mass-manufactured goods might be read as mass-manufactured culture. It is important for historical archaeologists to attempt to decode the complexities of consumption. Using a feminist approach, I examine one archaeologically visible way in which muted groups simultaneously embrace and resist the tenets of a dominant ideology. I compare ceramic assemblages from four nineteenth/twentieth-century sites in Annapolis, Maryland, two mid-nineteenth-century assemblages from New York City, and some additional selected examples from North America.


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