1. The Sensory Landscape of the Mid-Nineteenth-Century Connecticut River Valley
- Author
-
Linda M. Ziegenbein
- Subjects
Archeology ,History ,River valley ,060101 anthropology ,060102 archaeology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Space and place ,Space (commercial competition) ,Experiential learning ,Industrialisation ,Aesthetics ,0601 history and archaeology ,Racialization - Abstract
Landscapes have long been a focus of archaeological study, with particular attention paid to how they serve to shape the relationship between structures and features across space. More recently, archaeologists have begun to consider the experiential dimension of the landscape and how the senses serve to mediate how people make sense of space and place. Through careful analysis of the multisensory landscape of the mid-19th-century Connecticut River valley and the sensory world of the blind and Black abolitionist, journalist, and doctor David Ruggles, the process whereby people come to be connected to historical processes materially and sensually is revealed. This analysis illustrates how abolition, industrialization, and racialization were experienced through the senses and how they impacted Ruggles’s experience of the landscape.
- Published
- 2019
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