The Bioarchaeology of Structural Violence A Theoretical Framework for Industrial Era Inequality /

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Tremblay, Lori A. (Editor), Reedy, Sarah (Editor)
Summary:XIV, 284 p. 51 illus., 26 illus. in color.
text
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2020.
Edition:1st ed. 2020.
Series:Bioarchaeology and Social Theory,
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-46440-0
Format: Electronic Book
Table of Contents:
  • Chapter 1. Introduction (Lori A. Tremblay And Sarah Reedy)
  • Part I: The Structural Violence of Gender Inequality
  • Chapter 2. Female beauty, bodies, binding, and the bioarchaeology of structural violence in the industrial era through the lens of critical white feminism (Pamela K. Stone)
  • Chapter 3. Embodied discrimination and “mutilated historicity”: Archiving black women’s bodies in the Huntington collection (Aja M. Lans)
  • Chapter 4. Embodying industrialization: Inequality, structural violence, disease, and stress in working class and poor British women (Sarah Mathena-Allen and Molly K. Zuckerman). Chapter 5. Patriarchy in Industrial Era Europe: Skeletal evidence of male preference during growth (Sarah Reedy)
  • Part II: The Structural Violence of Social and Socioeconomic Inequalities
  • Chapter 6. The Erie County Poorhouse (1828-1926) as a Heterotopia: A bioarchaeological perspective (Jennifer L. Muller, Jennifer F. Byrnes, and David A. Ingleman)
  • Chapter 7. Norway’s Industrial Beginnings: New life challenges, recurring poverty, and the path to Tukthuset, Oslo House of Corrections (Gwyn Madden and Rose Drew)
  • Chapter 8. A new division of labor? Understanding structural violence through occupational stress: An examination of entheseal patterns and osteoarthritis in the Hamann-Todd collection (Anna Paraskevi Alioto)
  • Chapter 9. Products of industry: Pollution, health, and England’s Industrial Revolution (Sara A. McGuire)
  • Chapter 10. Health, well-being, and structural violence after sociopolitical revolution (Gina M. Agostini)
  • Chapter 11. Structural violence in antebellum New Orleans: How the interplay of socioeconomic status and law impacted the class structure of Louisiana’s port populations (Christine L. Halling and Ryan M. Seidemann)
  • Chapter 12. Conclusion (Sarah Reedy).