Cover -- Half title -- Title -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Chapter 1. An Introduction to Archaeologies of Violence and Privilege by Christopher N. Matthews and Bradley D. Phillippi -- Chapter 2. Violence in Archaeology and the Violence of Archaeology by Reinhard Bernbeck -- Chapter 3. Discursive Violence and Archaeological Ruptures: Archaeologies of Colonialism and Narrative Privilege in Highland Guatemala by Guido Pezzarossi -- Chapter 4. Spanish Colonialism and Spatial Violence by Kathryn E. Sampeck
Chapter 5. "An Incurable Evil": Direct and Structural Violence in the Mercury Mines of Colonial Huancavelica (AD 1564-1824) by Douglas K. Smit and Terren K. Proctor -- Chapter 6. The Violence of "A More Sensitive Class of Persons": Privilege, Landscape, and Class Struggle in Northeast Pennsylvania by Michael P. Roller -- Chapter 7. Sifting through Multiple Layers of Violence: The Archaeology of Gardens of a WWII Japanese American Incarceration Camp by Koji Lau-Ozawa
Chapter 8. Race and the Water: Swimming, Sewers, and Structural Violence in African America by Paul R. Mullins, Kyle Huskins, and Susan B. Hyatt -- Chapter 9. Binocular Vision: Making the Carceral Metropolis in Northern New Jersey by Christopher N. Matthews -- Chapter 10. Commentary: The Violence of Violence? by Louann Wurst -- Chapter 11. Forum: Thoughts and Future Directions -- References Cited -- List of Contributors -- Index
Summary:
In Archaeologies of Violence and Privilege, archaeologists Christopher N. Matthews and Bradley D. Phillippi bring together a collection of authors who document the ways in which past social formations rested on violent acts and reproduced violent social and cultural structures