Nanette

Archive for the ‘hope’ Category

Black History by the Shovel Full

In archealogy, goodnight moon, hidden lives of slaves, Not necessarily book related on January 6, 2010 at 12:43 am

I love this:

Those interested in understanding the daily lives of slaves are likely to learn more by shoveling dirt than reading through the written records of America’s plantations, Joe L. Speight told an audience at the Camden County Historical Society (CCHS) yesterday.

(Well, “yesterday” being in Febuary 2002, but still – when you’re talking centuries a few years here or there don’t matter much.)

“I am always encouraging African-American students to think about getting involved in archaeology because excavated artifacts provide more accurate information about the slave experience,” said Speight, a retired DuPont chemist who has studied art and archaeology at Rutgers and the University of Pennsylvania.

“The records that exist about slaves were always written from the point of view of the slave master,” he said. “Those records are biased. Their authors often misunderstood what they were seeing and often misrepresented what they recorded. A large part of the daily reality of slaves was never documented and never even seen by slave owners,” Speight said.

Never even seen…

Read about the pipes, too. I’ll have more to say on that at a later date, but it’s lovely.

Teaspoons and Shovels

In goodnight moon, Not necessarily book related on January 5, 2010 at 7:30 am

I want to begin and end each day of posting with something positive, or joyful or hopeful. Not always the easiest things to find material for … but it’s out there.

It may just take a little more digging, but it’s worth it. And speaking of digging…

I just came across an article about slave archealogy, called “Black History by the Shovel Full”. I’ve not had the time (or the brain power) to read it and absorb it yet but that will be my morning hope post, I think.

I’m just loving doing all this research – how could I ever have thought these lives dull or of little interest?

Well, of course I know the reason but that’s why it is so important for us to tell our own stories.

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