Beschreibung:
This book discusses archaeological research and representation of Native American lifeways at the Levanna site from 1923-1941 and through the 2007-9 re-excavations and artifact analyses, along with the supporting excavations at the Myers Farm site.
Levanna was a famous and well-visited archaeological site in central New York, along the eastern side of Cayuga Lake, during the Great Depression. It was primarily known for its spectacular animal effigies. But were they real or forgeries? Jack Rossen takes us on a journey through the 1920s and 1930s, the era of an outdoor museum, and professional attempts by the Society for American Archaeology (SAA) to suppress it.
Larger than life characters include Arthur C. Parker, future President of the SAA, William A. Ritchie, future State Archaeologist of New York, and Harrison C. Follett, the entrepreneurial archaeologist. The book also takes us through the 2007-2009 re-excavation of Levanna and the related 2011-2014 excavations at the Myers Farm site. Along the way, Cayuga history is reinterpreted as more peaceful than previously believed, and the case is made for a Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy more than one thousand years old. An older confederacy is more in line with oral traditions than previous archaeological ideas of a brief confederacy that began either just before or after European contact.
The work was conducted through the framework of indigenous collaborative archaeology with leaders of the Cayuga and Haudenosaunee Confederacy. The narrative approach includes stories of the contemporary people, both Native and non-Native, who protected the site, supported the research, and provided ideas, wisdom, inspiration, and friendship.
Chapter 1: Levanna: A Nexus of Stories and IssuesChapter 2. Pulling Down the Pillars: Early Investigations at Levanna (1922-1941)Chapter 3. Indigenous Archaeology, the Age of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, and the Use of Oral Traditions Chapter 4: The 2007 to 2009 Levanna ExcavationsChapter 5: Further Reinterpretation of the Cayuga: The Myers Farm siteChapter 6. Conclusions: Chasing the Ghosts of the Old -Time New York Archaeologists