ABSTRACT

The first book to integrate fully the archaeological study of the landscape with the concerns of colonial and postcolonial history, theory and scholarship, The Archaeology of the Colonized focuses on the experience of the colonized in their landscape setting, looking at case studies from areas of the world not often considered in the postcolonial debate. It offers original, exciting approaches to the growing area of research in archaeology and colonialism.

From the pyramids of Old Kingdom Egypt to illicit whisky distilling in nineteenth-century Scotland, and from the Roman roads of Turkey to the threshing floors of Cyprus under British colonial rule, the case studies assist Dr. Given as he uses the archaeological evidence to create a vivid picture of how the lives and identities of farmers, artisans and labourers were affected by colonial systems of oppressive taxation, bureaucracy, forced labour and ideological control.

This will be valuable to students, scholars or professionals investigating the relationship between local community and central control in a wide range of historical and archaeological contexts.

chapter 1|7 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 3|23 pages

THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF TAXATION

chapter 4|20 pages

THE SETTLEMENT OF EMPIRE

chapter 5|24 pages

LIVING BETWEEN LINES

chapter 6|23 pages

THE DOMINATED BODY

chapter 7|22 pages

THE PATRON SAINT OF TAX EVADERS

chapter 8|24 pages

LANDSCAPES OF RESISTANCE