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Belvoir: An Archaeology of Maryland Slavery: Archaeologies of Restorative Justice

Autor Julie M. Schablitsky Cuvânt înainte de Edward González-Tennant, Ben Ford Autor Sara Mascia
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 oct 2025
Unearthed truths, buried lives: Belvoir reveals the pain, resilience, and reckoning found beneath the soil of a Maryland plantation.
Near Annapolis, Maryland, a former tobacco plantation dating to the 1730s holds centuries of untold history. In Belvoir: An Archaeology of Maryland Slavery, Julie M. Schablitsky leads readers on an archaeological narrative to unearth the lives and stories still buried there.The book begins with an introduction to the estate’s history, detailing its ownership by prominent families such as the Rosses, Scotts, Worthingtons, and Welshes. Schablitsky highlights the landscape of the estate, including the unique thirty-two-square-foot stone quarter built for enslaved people.
With sensitivity and scientific rigor, Schablitsky shifts focus to the enslaved people who lived and labored at Belvoir for more than eighty years. Through detailed excavation of the stone quarter and analysis of everyday artifacts—buttons, tobacco pipes, food remains, ceramics—she reconstructs the daily life, acts of resistance, and the cultural endurance of a community forced to navigate brutality.
Yet what makes Belvoir especially vital is its ethical compass. Schablitsky centers the voices of descendants, allowing their questions, memories, and presence to shape the narrative. The result is a groundbreaking archaeological case study and a blueprint for restorative justice at sites of enslavement. Scholars, archaeologists, and general readers alike will find Belvoir a deeply human, profoundly necessary book, one that confronts the past with clarity, care, and the hope of reconciliation.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780817362225
ISBN-10: 0817362223
Pagini: 152
Ilustrații: 40 B&W Figures - 2 Maps
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: University Of Alabama Press
Colecția University Alabama Press
Seria Archaeologies of Restorative Justice


Notă biografică

Julie M. Schablitsky is the chief archaeologist at the Maryland Department of Transportation and adjunct assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Maryland. She is editor of Box Office Archaeology: Refining Hollywood’s Portrayals of the Past and coeditor of An Archaeology of Desperation: Exploring the Donner Party’s Alder Creek Camp and Archaeology of the War of 1812.
 

Cuprins

Illustrations
Foreword
Edward González-Tennant and Ben Ford
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Digging and Discovering
1. Descending and Honoring
2. Building and Enslaving
3. Designing and Housing
4. Cooking and Serving
5. Consuming and Supplementing
6. Adorning and Signaling
7. Resisting and Concluding
Epilogue
References Cited
Index

Recenzii

Belvoir is very well organized and well written. Books that do a deep dive into specific sites are always welcome. They are particularly important if they are accessible to the general reader as well as to archaeologists. Both of these audiences will enjoy this book.”—Barbara J. Little, author of Bending Archaeology toward Social Justice: Transformational Action for Positive Peace
“This is a must-read book. It illustrates historical archaeology at its finest and is a tour-de-force of fieldwork techniques and interpretations.”—Richard Veit, coeditor of Archaeologies of African American Life in the Upper Mid-Atlantic
“In a time when the history of slavery in America is being denied, covered up and shamefully erased, it is important for books like this to be published. It is not to shame anyone or point fingers and appoint blame, but to give an accurate account of the lives of people who were unwillingly brought to these shores to build and maintain the lives of their enslavers.”—Wanda Watts, Baltimore City

Descriere

In Belvoir: An Archaeology of Maryland Slavery, Julie M. Schablitsky excavates more than just artifacts; she uncovers stories of survival, resistance, and restoration of enslaved African Americans who lived and worked at Belvoir during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Through archaeological discovery and collaboration with descendant communities, Schablitsky reshapes how we remember slavery in America and offers a model for ethical archaeology rooted in justice and care.