A groundbreaking overview of how disability studies can enrich interpretations of the past and make the profession of archaeology more inclusive and accessible
An Introduction to Crip Archaeology is a groundbreaking exploration of how disability studies and critical disability studies can transform the way archaeologists interpret the past. Through case studies and intersectional analysis, Laurie Wilkie and Katherine Kinkopf reveal how people with disabilities have been treated and viewed in American history and how these processes have shaped the material worlds archaeologists study.
This book is an essential starting point for students and scholars seeking to move beyond stereotypes that define disability as a limitation or deficit. The authors demonstrate how these interpretive lenses can offer fresh insights on topics including how eugenic policies and racial science have influenced public health, medical training, and family planning. From the Dozier School for Boys to Japanese internment camps, the book examines how built environments have excluded certain bodieswhile also uncovering communities of care and resistance.
In addition to its value for research taking place today, An Introduction to Crip Archaeology is a call to action for a more inclusive and accessible discipline. It equips readers with strategies for recognizing disabling structures in access to sites, collections, and universities, and for creating space for disabled archaeologists in the field. This book enriches understandings of the past while shaping the future of archaeology.
List of Figures
List of Tables
Foreword
Acknowledgments
1. Introducing Crip Archaeology
2. Scientific Racism, Collecting of Human Remains, and Disability
3. Using Archaeology to Understand Life in a Eugenic Nation
4. Rethinking Archaeologies of Dependence
5. Institutions as Debilitating Spaces
6. Communities of Care and the Trouble with Healing
7. Crip Archaeology Futures
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Laurie A. Wilkie, distinguished professor of anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, is the author of Unburied Lives: The Historical Archaeology of Buffalo Soldiers at Fort Davis, Texas, 18691875.
Katherine M. Kinkopf is assistant professor of anthropology at North Carolina State University.