Feminist archaeology employs a feminist perspective in interpreting past societies.
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Feminist archaeology employs a feminist perspective in interpreting past societies.
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Feminist archaeology has critiqued the uncritical application of modern, Western norms and values to past societies.
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Feminist archaeology has expanded in recent years to include intersectional analyses, such as Black Feminist archaeology, Indigenous archaeology, and post-colonial archaeology.
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Feminist archaeology initially emerged in the late 1970s and early 80s, along with other objections to the epistemology espoused by the processual school of archaeological thought, such as symbolic and hermeneutic archaeologies.
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Outside the Americas, feminist archaeology enjoyed an earlier emergence and greater support among the greater archaeological community.
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Gender archaeology has become a wide umbrella, including, but not limited to, feminist work that employs queer theory, practice theory, and performance theory, among others.
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Feminist archaeology engages in challenging and changing interpretive frameworks employed by archaeologists: “Feminism is a politics aimed at changing gender-based power relations.
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In contrast, gender archaeology not employed by feminists lacks such characteristics.
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Feminist archaeology archaeologists continue to challenge archaeological norms and expand research into new intellectual territories.
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Black Feminist Archaeology is relatively new within the discipline of archaeology, and has been predominantly led by Black women in historical North American contexts.
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Feminist archaeology served as the only African in the household for 11 years, before another child, Sarah Gilbert, was taken in by the Foster's.
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Feminist archaeology suggests that, like many other African American women did at the time, Lucy likely continued to work service jobs and other kinds of manual labor, like cooking, laundry, and sewing, evidenced by the number of needles, thimbles, and buttons found in her material assemblage.
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Feminist archaeology was never told to abandon her property or move to an alms house.
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Maritime Feminist archaeology has began to reflect on itself as a strongly masculine Feminist archaeology subfield.
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Feminist archaeology has had a lasting impact on archaeology that continues to grow today.
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One of the biggest contributions from feminist archaeology is the revisitation of past cultural circumstances, which has led to the reevaluation of women's roles and revealed situations where women were more present than previously thought.
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Additionally, there has been a lack of crossover between mainstream feminist academia and archaeological theory, showcasing that feminist archaeology has not yet made the jump into mainstream feminist circles.
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