HomeCreating Freedom: Material Culture and African-American Identity at Oakley Plantation, Louisiana, 1840–1950
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Creating Freedom: Material Culture and African-American Identity at Oakley Plantation, Louisiana, 1840–1950

hardcoverOctober 1, 2000
Regular price $226.25 USD
Regular price Sale price $226.25 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New Out of Stock
ISBN-13: 9780807125823 ISBN-10: 0807125822
Publisher
LSU Press
Binding
hardcover
Published
October 1, 2000
Weight
1.5 lbs
Dimensions
22.90×1.80×15.20 cm

About this book

Creating Freedom: Material Culture and African-American Identity at Oakley Plantation, Louisiana, 1840–1950 by Wilkie, Laurie A.. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780807125823.

Historians conception of plantation life in the American South, both post- and antebellum, derives almost exclusively from the written record, hence mainly from the white owners perspectives. In Creating Freedom, historical archaeologist Laurie Wilkie pulls the half-opened curtain wider by seeking out the experiences of the majority of people who made their home on plantations: the African American laborers. Specifically, Wilkie examines the lives of four black families who lived at Oakley Plantation in south Louisianas West Feliciana Parish over the course of one hundred years. Using an innovative blend of archaeological evidence and oral interviews, as well as written documents, she builds a composite of their daily existence that is at once riveting and humanizing in its detail and invaluable in its broader applications. Creating Freedom is in part Wilkies attempt to understand how African Americans at Oakley Plantation, and by extension most southern blacks, endured the violence and oppression of slavery, Reconstruction, and Jim Crow. It is through their material culture, enhanced by a range of other data, that she descries the complex but uplifting process by which they retained their ties to a cultural past while renegotiating their identity as free persons.