超越边界的生活:在北美西南部边缘地区构建身份

Q1 Social Sciences Southeastern Archaeology Pub Date : 2021-10-02 DOI:10.1080/0734578X.2021.2003018
Jonathan Micon
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The typical product was slipped with an Albany or similar slip on both the interior and exterior. About one-fifth of the vessels were instead salt-glazed on the exterior and Albany-slipped on the interior. Some of the salt-glazed examples also had been cobalt decorated with free-hand (majority) or stenciled (minority) motifs. Based on sherd counts, jugs (n=753), jars/churns (n=573), and bowls/ milk pans (n=206) were the most commonly produced forms. The final chapter addresses a series of research questions that drove the investigations. Buchner recognizes the importance of the Howe Pottery as the last of the “traditional potteries” in the Benton area, and contrasts the Howe works with two, subsequent, industrial potteries in Benton. The graphics are generally effective, although some color plates of the kiln remains and sherds would have been better than the black-and-white photographs provided. It would have been helpful to provide a scale on Figure 104, drawings of representative vessel forms. The report would have benefitted from a broader perspective on the spread of potters, kiln technologies, and glazes through the greater Southeast. The report begins rather abruptly, basically stating “and then the first pottery was established in Arkansas.” Several state-level volumes – including Georgia, South Carolina North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Pennsylvania, New York, and Delaware – and recent literature on the expanding stoneware frontier would have allowed Buchner to interpret the Howe shop within a broader perspective. He might also have been able to identify possible sources for specific traits (e.g., was the cobalt-stenciling motif influenced by a potter who formerly worked in southwestern Pennsylvania?). I also found one more aspect of the report disappointing. Having published on the Alkaline to Albany transition in Georgia, I would have liked to have seen a more fully considered discussion of the Howe adoption of Albanylike slip. The decision was not a simple question of the slip becoming available, so it was used. The shift to Albany-like slip required changes to the overall potterymaking process, the outlay of cash to purchase the slip, and more labor to slip the vessels. The Howe Pottery captured the period of change from salt to slip, and I feel that Buchner missed an opportunity to address a major panregional issue. Credit must be given to Buchner and the Arkansas Archaeological Survey. Their publication of this report as part of the Research Series assures greater exposure and use of this work. Furthermore, at a time when most publications are prohibitively costly, the Survey offers this study at the bargain price of $20.00. I await the day that an ambitious graduate student undertakes a GIS-based analysis of the regional landscape of traditional potting. By linking together thorough shop-specific studies, one would be able to create a timeprogressive animation of how specific potters, kiln types, glazes and slips, and vessel forms progressed across the country. Buchner has provided a valuable dataset on the Howe Pottery and related Benton-area potteries, more pieces in the mosaic of traditional pottery-making. The very minor criticisms aside, Buchner has created a thorough and informative study of a pottery operation just before the demise of the rural, utilitarian stoneware potter in the southeastern United States. 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Other than one grainy photograph from a later pottery in Benton, Buchner does not state any evidence for a beehive kiln and against a bottle kiln. Bottle kilns were certainly common in the latenineteenth-century stoneware industry. For this reviewer, there is not sufficient evidence to argue either beehive or bottle kiln. Chapter 6 thoroughly documents the artifacts recovered. Naturally, the focus of this chapter is stoneware vessels, but Buchner also provides excellent descriptions of the kiln hardware and construction materials. The typical product was slipped with an Albany or similar slip on both the interior and exterior. About one-fifth of the vessels were instead salt-glazed on the exterior and Albany-slipped on the interior. Some of the salt-glazed examples also had been cobalt decorated with free-hand (majority) or stenciled (minority) motifs. Based on sherd counts, jugs (n=753), jars/churns (n=573), and bowls/ milk pans (n=206) were the most commonly produced forms. The final chapter addresses a series of research questions that drove the investigations. Buchner recognizes the importance of the Howe Pottery as the last of the “traditional potteries” in the Benton area, and contrasts the Howe works with two, subsequent, industrial potteries in Benton. The graphics are generally effective, although some color plates of the kiln remains and sherds would have been better than the black-and-white photographs provided. It would have been helpful to provide a scale on Figure 104, drawings of representative vessel forms. The report would have benefitted from a broader perspective on the spread of potters, kiln technologies, and glazes through the greater Southeast. The report begins rather abruptly, basically stating “and then the first pottery was established in Arkansas.” Several state-level volumes – including Georgia, South Carolina North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Pennsylvania, New York, and Delaware – and recent literature on the expanding stoneware frontier would have allowed Buchner to interpret the Howe shop within a broader perspective. He might also have been able to identify possible sources for specific traits (e.g., was the cobalt-stenciling motif influenced by a potter who formerly worked in southwestern Pennsylvania?). I also found one more aspect of the report disappointing. Having published on the Alkaline to Albany transition in Georgia, I would have liked to have seen a more fully considered discussion of the Howe adoption of Albanylike slip. The decision was not a simple question of the slip becoming available, so it was used. The shift to Albany-like slip required changes to the overall potterymaking process, the outlay of cash to purchase the slip, and more labor to slip the vessels. The Howe Pottery captured the period of change from salt to slip, and I feel that Buchner missed an opportunity to address a major panregional issue. Credit must be given to Buchner and the Arkansas Archaeological Survey. Their publication of this report as part of the Research Series assures greater exposure and use of this work. Furthermore, at a time when most publications are prohibitively costly, the Survey offers this study at the bargain price of $20.00. I await the day that an ambitious graduate student undertakes a GIS-based analysis of the regional landscape of traditional potting. By linking together thorough shop-specific studies, one would be able to create a timeprogressive animation of how specific potters, kiln types, glazes and slips, and vessel forms progressed across the country. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

外墙、火箱和窑地面的部分。窑的外径为5.0米,内径为3.76米。可能有四个消防箱。Buchner认为,这很可能是一个有着低矮圆顶屋顶的蜂窝窑。除了一张来自本顿后期陶器的颗粒照片外,布赫纳没有说明任何证据表明有蜂窝窑和瓶子窑。瓶窑在13世纪晚期的石器工业中确实很常见。对于这位评论家来说,没有足够的证据来论证蜂窝或瓶窑。第6章详细记录了所发现的文物。当然,本章的重点是石器器皿,但布赫纳也对窑炉硬件和建筑材料进行了出色的描述。典型的产品在内部和外部都有Albany或类似的打滑。大约五分之一的容器外部是盐釉的,奥尔巴尼在内部滑动。一些盐釉的例子也被钴装饰成自由手(大多数)或模板(少数)图案。根据碎片数量,罐子(n=753)、罐子/搅拌器(n=573)和碗/牛奶锅(n=206)是最常见的生产形式。最后一章阐述了推动调查的一系列研究问题。布赫纳认识到豪陶器作为本顿地区最后一个“传统陶器”的重要性,并将豪的作品与本顿随后的两个工业陶器进行了对比。这些图形通常是有效的,尽管窑遗迹和碎片的一些彩色板会比提供的黑白照片更好。如果能在图104中提供一个比例,即代表性容器形状的图纸,会很有帮助。从更广泛的角度来看,该报告将受益于陶工、窑炉技术和釉料在大东南地区的传播。报告的开头相当突然,基本上是说“然后第一件陶器在阿肯色州建立起来。”几个州级的卷——包括佐治亚州、南卡罗来纳州、北卡罗来纳州、田纳西州、阿拉巴马州、宾夕法尼亚州、纽约州、,以及特拉华州——最近关于不断扩大的石器边境的文献本可以让布赫纳从更广阔的角度来解释豪商店。他可能还能够确定特定特征的可能来源(例如,钴模板图案是否受到一位曾在宾夕法尼亚州西南部工作的陶工的影响?)。我还发现报告的另一个方面令人失望。在发表了关于佐治亚州从碱性到奥尔巴尼的过渡的文章后,我本希望看到对豪采用类似奥尔巴尼的滑梯进行更充分考虑的讨论。这个决定并不是一个简单的纸条可用的问题,所以它被使用了。向奥尔巴尼式卡瓦的转变需要改变整个制陶过程,购买卡瓦的现金支出,以及更多的劳动力来滑动器皿。豪陶器捕捉到了从盐到滑的变化时期,我觉得布赫纳错过了解决一个重大泛地区问题的机会。必须归功于布赫纳和阿肯色州考古调查局。他们将本报告作为研究系列的一部分出版,确保了这项工作的更多曝光和使用。此外,在大多数出版物成本高昂的时候,调查以20.00美元的低价提供了这项研究。我期待着一位雄心勃勃的研究生对传统盆栽的区域景观进行基于GIS的分析。通过将彻底的特定于商店的研究联系在一起,人们将能够创建一个关于特定陶器、窑型、釉料和卡瓦以及器皿形式如何在全国各地发展的时间进度动画。Buchner提供了一个关于Howe Pottery和相关Benton地区陶器的有价值的数据集,更多的是传统陶器制作的马赛克。撇开这些微小的批评不谈,布赫纳对美国东南部农村实用的石器制陶师即将消亡之前的一项陶器经营进行了全面而翔实的研究。这份报告值得所有研究美国民间陶器的人,以及阿肯色州和大东南部历史考古学的学生都能看到。
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Life Beyond the Boundaries: Constructing Identity in Edge Regions of the North American Southwest
nants of exterior walls, fire boxes, and sections of the kiln floor. The kiln has an exterior diameter of 5.0 meters and an interior diameter of 3.76 meters. There were likely four fire boxes. Buchner suggests that this was likely a beehive kiln with a low, domed roof. Other than one grainy photograph from a later pottery in Benton, Buchner does not state any evidence for a beehive kiln and against a bottle kiln. Bottle kilns were certainly common in the latenineteenth-century stoneware industry. For this reviewer, there is not sufficient evidence to argue either beehive or bottle kiln. Chapter 6 thoroughly documents the artifacts recovered. Naturally, the focus of this chapter is stoneware vessels, but Buchner also provides excellent descriptions of the kiln hardware and construction materials. The typical product was slipped with an Albany or similar slip on both the interior and exterior. About one-fifth of the vessels were instead salt-glazed on the exterior and Albany-slipped on the interior. Some of the salt-glazed examples also had been cobalt decorated with free-hand (majority) or stenciled (minority) motifs. Based on sherd counts, jugs (n=753), jars/churns (n=573), and bowls/ milk pans (n=206) were the most commonly produced forms. The final chapter addresses a series of research questions that drove the investigations. Buchner recognizes the importance of the Howe Pottery as the last of the “traditional potteries” in the Benton area, and contrasts the Howe works with two, subsequent, industrial potteries in Benton. The graphics are generally effective, although some color plates of the kiln remains and sherds would have been better than the black-and-white photographs provided. It would have been helpful to provide a scale on Figure 104, drawings of representative vessel forms. The report would have benefitted from a broader perspective on the spread of potters, kiln technologies, and glazes through the greater Southeast. The report begins rather abruptly, basically stating “and then the first pottery was established in Arkansas.” Several state-level volumes – including Georgia, South Carolina North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Pennsylvania, New York, and Delaware – and recent literature on the expanding stoneware frontier would have allowed Buchner to interpret the Howe shop within a broader perspective. He might also have been able to identify possible sources for specific traits (e.g., was the cobalt-stenciling motif influenced by a potter who formerly worked in southwestern Pennsylvania?). I also found one more aspect of the report disappointing. Having published on the Alkaline to Albany transition in Georgia, I would have liked to have seen a more fully considered discussion of the Howe adoption of Albanylike slip. The decision was not a simple question of the slip becoming available, so it was used. The shift to Albany-like slip required changes to the overall potterymaking process, the outlay of cash to purchase the slip, and more labor to slip the vessels. The Howe Pottery captured the period of change from salt to slip, and I feel that Buchner missed an opportunity to address a major panregional issue. Credit must be given to Buchner and the Arkansas Archaeological Survey. Their publication of this report as part of the Research Series assures greater exposure and use of this work. Furthermore, at a time when most publications are prohibitively costly, the Survey offers this study at the bargain price of $20.00. I await the day that an ambitious graduate student undertakes a GIS-based analysis of the regional landscape of traditional potting. By linking together thorough shop-specific studies, one would be able to create a timeprogressive animation of how specific potters, kiln types, glazes and slips, and vessel forms progressed across the country. Buchner has provided a valuable dataset on the Howe Pottery and related Benton-area potteries, more pieces in the mosaic of traditional pottery-making. The very minor criticisms aside, Buchner has created a thorough and informative study of a pottery operation just before the demise of the rural, utilitarian stoneware potter in the southeastern United States. The report warrants inclusion on the shelves of all who study American folk pottery and those who are students of the historical archaeology of Arkansas and the greater Southeast.
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Southeastern Archaeology
Southeastern Archaeology Social Sciences-Archeology
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Southeastern Archaeology is a refereed journal that publishes works concerning the archaeology and history of southeastern North America and neighboring regions. It covers all time periods, from Paleoindian to recent history and defines the southeast broadly; this could be anything from Florida (south) to Wisconsin (North) and from Oklahoma (west) to Virginia (east). Reports or articles that cover neighboring regions such as the Northeast, Plains, or Caribbean would be considered if they had sufficient relevance.
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