1st Edition

The Archaeology of Mothering An African-American Midwife's Tale

By Laurie A. Wilkie Copyright 2004
    270 Pages
    by Routledge

    270 Pages
    by Routledge

    Using archaeological materials recovered from a housesite in Mobile, Alabama, Laurie Wilkie explores how one extended African-American family engaged with competing and conflicting mothering ideologies in the post-Emancipation South.

    List of Figures List of Tables Acknowledgements Prologue 1. Why an Archaeology of Mothering? 2. The Perryman Family of Mobile Narrative Interlude I 3. African-American Mothering and Enslavement Narrative Interlude II 4. Mothering and Domesticity in Freedom: Ideology and Practice Narrative Interlude III 5. Midwifery as Mother's Work Narrative Interlude IV 6. To Mother or not to Mother Narrative Interlude V 7. Midwifery and Scientific Mothering Narrative Interlude VI 8. Conclusions: The Many Ideologies of African-American Motherhood Bibliography

    Biography

    Laurie Wilkie is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Creating Freedom (Louisana State University Press 2000) and Ethnicity, Community and Power (University of South Carolina Press 1994).

    "Wilkie has produced a detailed and intimate portrait of individual lives, the specificities of female experience, and the lived realities of slavery and social location in nineteenth-century America. This engaging and important book brings together a wealth of archaeological data and theory and demonstrates the rich potentials of social archaeology." -- Lynn Meskell, co-author of Embodied Lives: Figuring Ancient Maya and Egyptian Experience (Routledge, 2003)
    "A fresh, new, and most timely and innovative contribution to feminist studies and to historical archaeology. Wilkie elegantly demonstrates how archaeological evidence can be brought to bear on important and highly relevant issues such as: culturally-specific definitions of motherhood and mothering; women's experiences during and after enslavement; racism and its effects on women's lives; midwifery as women's work; and 'recovered biography.' I am in awe of Wilkie's impressive scholarship and abilities as a writer. This is historical archaeology as it should be done; this is historical archaeology at its best." -- Mary C. Beaudry, editor of Documentary Archaeology in the New World