远北昆士兰华人的历史考古

Q1 Arts and Humanities Queensland Archaeological Research Pub Date : 2013-02-04 DOI:10.25120/QAR.16.2013.226
Heather Burke, G. Grimwade
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引用次数: 6

摘要

第一批海外华人移民于1868年抵达远北昆士兰(FNQ),并在20年内建立了广泛的定居点,直接进入中国商人的供应网络。自20世纪80年代中期以来,一些遗址的历史考古工作一直在进行,但主要是由咨询公司推动的,数据不完整,向城市中心倾斜,而且往往不可比较。然而,这种与饮食行为有关的比较表明,传统的陶瓷碗和高比例的普通青瓷和四季装饰器皿占主导地位,但早期对欧洲酒类的偏好是明确的。继续坚持中国文化对食物的偏好,而不是对酒精的偏好,这表明身份和自我建构的概念可能在每个领域都有不同的构建。虽然深度有限,但FNQ的海外华人考古突出了关键的空白,并提供了一个初步的平台,从中确定未来的研究方向,特别是需要通过详细的地表记录和/或有针对性的开放区域挖掘来补充与影响评估相关的研究,以推进知识超越基本的存在/缺席问题。
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The historical archaeology of the Chinese in Far North Queensland
The first Overseas Chinese immigrants to Far North Queensland (FNQ) arrived in 1868 and within 20 years had established a wide range of settlements keyed directly into Chinese merchant supply networks. Historical archaeology on some of these sites has been carried out since the mid-1980s, but has largely been consultancy-driven, creating data that are patchy, skewed towards urban centres and often non-comparable. Such comparisons as can be drawn relating to dining and drinking behaviours, however, show assemblages dominated by traditional ceramic bowls and a high proportion of plain celadon and Four Seasons decorated wares, but an early and decided preference for European alcohols. Continued adherence to Chinese cultural preferences relating to food but not to alcohol suggests that concepts of identity and the construction of the self may have been constructed differently in each arena. While limited in depth, the archaeology of the Overseas Chinese in FNQ highlights critical gaps and provides a preliminary platform from which to identify future research directions, particularly a need to supplement impact assessment-related studies with detailed surface recording and/or carefully targeted open area excavations in order to advance knowledge beyond basic presence/absence questions.
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来源期刊
Queensland Archaeological Research
Queensland Archaeological Research Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
期刊介绍: Queensland Archaeological Research is a peer-reviewed journal published since 1984 devoted to publishing substantive, original and high-quality archaeological research pertaining to Queensland, Australia and adjacent areas. Data-rich manuscripts are particularly welcome. Queensland Archaeological Research is published in English in one volume each year. Submission of articles to Queensland Archaeological Research is free. Access to articles in Queensland Archaeological Research is free.
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