Artifacts elicit emotional responses in people. I will argue this  point with a shoe… actually, a few of them. But first, some background.
On the American Anthropological Association Website, Anthropology is defined as the “study of humans past and present…A  central concern of anthropologists is the application of knowledge to  the solution of human problems”. An anthropological subfield,  archaeology studies human cultures through their material remains.
So what?
What does an archaeological perspective add to anthropology?  Materials provide a focal point that grounds abstract ideas or  experiences. Family pictures, plaques, or mementos serve as special  reminders of the past events and experiences, but materials, and the  social performances in which they are set, can work for you as well. Pipe cleaners can facilitate healing after a childhood in the shadow of domestic violence. The performance of two black artists demonstrating graffiti art  in a room full of white academics challenges several layers of  assumptions. Pipe cleaners and pieces of wood are common. The importance  of these particular material artifacts come from their context or the  stories associated with them.
Shoes. We wear them nearly everyday. They are commonplace. In the  right context they are effective bridges to facilitate an understanding  of historic events. For me, the most powerful example of this bridge is  the shoe room at the Holocaust Museum.
Image from Flickr user Anna Lundqvist
This room engages more than your ears listening to a story. Eyes  aren’t enough to process the materials in front of you. The smell of  leather overwhelms you. Context provided by the rest of the museum  solidifies your understanding of exactly how horrific the Holocaust was.  Reviews of the museum are a testament to the impact of this exhibit.
When I was the park archaeologist at Cane River Creole National Historical Park, I excavated a unit under the collapsed chimney at the North Tenant Cabin at Oakland Plantation:
 The artifacts recovered from the excavation included one leather  shoe. Speaking with park visitors and other archaeologists in the area  contextualized this artifact in the material culture of hoodoo.  The shoe was located underneath an opening (the chimney) in the house.  Park visitors told me the placement was meant to keep witches and evil  spirits out of the house. Similar caches of artifacts are found in  Annapolis, Maryland. Here is a webpage on hoodoo at the James Brice House in Annapolis, a .pdf report on excavations at the Adams-Kitty House (see appendix 1), and some videos of Mark Leone discussing the subject.
Recently, during a project for the Kentucky Archaeology Survey we encountered some brick piers from a historic structure.  Here's an image from the site:
During the excavation, we recovered several leather shoes and shoe fragments. While archaeologists are still working on an interpretation of the site, its location beside the tallest building in Lexington is remarkable. This shot was from inside the excavation trench:
In this context, leather shoes, and this site, could provide a focal  point from which to discuss the historical development of Lexington,  Kentucky.
At the 2011 Now What Lexington  conference, I co-led a session on public archaeology. Attempting to  conform to the unconference format, we tried to speak only enough to get  the conversation moving and the comments were very valuable (a post for  another time). One of the participants, Mick Jefferies,  remarked that, to him, archaeology was about the stories we tell. They  promote modern people to become viscerally rooted in their communities.
I can think of no better way to put it myself, thanks Mick.
Nicolas Laracuente
@archaeologist
Nicolas Laracuente




 
1 comment:
Regarding shoes concealed in and around buildings, see my thesis research, some of which is available here: http://ballstate.academia.edu/ChrisManningPratt/Papers
Chris
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