Finally, research collaborations have analyzed community formation and activity through the lens of past and present mortuary practices. In addition, studies currently investigate the politics of death and burial, including who controlled mortuary spaces, at what times, by which means, and for what purposes. Historical archaeologies of the African diaspora in the Caribbean have recently expanded on analyses of relationships among religion, mortuary practices, burial sites within varied landscapes, and environmental, social, economic, and cultural contexts. Research questions centered on exploring sartorial practices of self-making engaged by Afro-Crucians from slavery through freedom are used to illuminate spaces of tension as well as productive encounters between the archaeological and archival records. Croix, provides the backdrop through which the potentiality of archaeological and documentary data are explored. ![]() Preliminary archaeological and archival work ongoing at the Estate Little Princess, an 18th-century former Danish sugar plantation on the island of St. This article draws on Black feminist and post-colonial theoretical frameworks to interrogate the historicity of archaeological and archival records. However, these two sources of primary historical data (i.e., material culture and documentary evidence) are not without their limitations. Archaeological and archival research adds historical depth to these conversations, providing new insights into the lived experiences of Afro-Crucians from enslavement through post-emancipation. neo-imperial rule - are at the forefront of public dialogue on both sides of the Atlantic. In light of this commemoration, topics related to representations of the past, and the preservation of heritage in the present - entangled with the residuum of Danish colonialism and the lasting impact of U.S. The year 2017 marked the centennial transfer of the Virgin Islands from Denmark to the United States.
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