Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T04:30:45.218Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

CRAFTING IDENTITY: ACQUISITION, PRODUCTION, USE, AND RECYCLING OF SOAPSTONE DURING THE MISSION PERIOD IN ALTA CALIFORNIA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 April 2018

Kaitlin M. Brown*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara, 552 University Road, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA (kbrown@umail.ucsb.edu)

Abstract

This article investigates the daily practices and social processes of indigenous identity negotiation in the Santa Barbara Channel region through an analysis of soapstone ollas, bowls, and comales. After assessing the source of the raw material and using a typological classification based upon form and function, I discuss the ways in which soapstone cooking wares were used diachronically and across the colonial landscape. These finds show a reorganization of the soapstone industry inside the mission space: soapstone was acquired from new sources, an emphasis was placed on the production of bowls and comales, and more soapstone vessels show evidence of remodification. However, the continued use of traditional soapstone ollas in historically occupied Chumash villages outside the mission indicates persistent practices that linked indigenous peoples to a deep ancestral past. I argue that these changes and continuities illuminate a range of identities that existed between the cultural spaces previously described as “native” and “Spanish.” This study illustrates that indigenous peoples negotiated, redeployed, and expressed their identities in new ways that allowed them to adapt and persist under colonialism.

Este trabajo investiga las prácticas diarias y los procesos sociales de negociación de identidad indígena en la región del Canal de Santa Bárbara a través del análisis de ollas, cuencos y comales de esteatita. Después de evaluar la fuente de la materia prima y emplear una clasificación tipológica basada en la forma y función, se discuten las formas en que las vajillas de cocina de esteatita se usaron diacrónicamente y a lo largo del paisaje colonial. Estos hallazgos muestran una reorganización de la industria de la esteatita dentro del espacio de la misión: la esteatita fue adquirida de nuevas fuentes; se enfatizó la producción de tazones y comales; y más vasijas de esteatita muestran evidencia de remodificación. Sin embargo, el uso continuado de ollas tradicionales de esteatita en aldeas Chumash históricamente ocupadas fuera de la misión indica prácticas persistentes que vinculaban las comunidades indígenas a un profundo pasado ancestral. Estos cambios y continuidades iluminan un rango de identidades que existían entre los espacios culturales previamente descritos como “nativo” y “español”. Este estudio ilustra que las comunidades indígenas negociaron, reasignaron y expresaron sus identidades de nuevas maneras que les permitieron adaptarse y persistir bajo el régimen colonial.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2018 by the Society for American Archaeology 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Abbott, Charles C. 1879 Steatite Cooking Pots, Plates, and Food Vessels. In Archaeology, edited by Putnam, Frederick W., pp. 93116. Report upon Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth Meridian, Vol. VII, George M. Wheeler, supervisor, US Army, Office of the Chief of Engineers, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Adams, Jenny L. 2002 Ground Stone Analysis: A Technological Approach. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Arnold, Jeanne E. (editor) 2001 The Origins of a Pacific Coast Chiefdom: The Chumash of the Channel Islands. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Basgall, Mark E., and True, Delbert L. 1985 Archaeological Investigations in Crowder Canyon, 1973–1984: Excavations at Sites SBr-421B, SBr-421C, SBr-421D, and SBR-713. Submitted to the California Department of Transportation. Copies available from Archaeological Information Center, San Bernardino County Museum, Redlands, California.Google Scholar
Bettinger, Robert L. 2015 Orderly Anarchy: Sociopolitical Evolution in Aboriginal California. University of California Press, Oakland.Google Scholar
Castillo, Edward D. 1989 The Native Response to the Colonization of Alta California. In Columbian Consequences, edited by Hurst Thomas, David, pp. 377394. Archaeological and Historical Perspectives on the Spanish Borderlands West, Vol. 1. Smithsonian Institute Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Chartkoff, Joseph J. 1998 Archaeology of Prehistoric Native America: An Encyclopedia. Garland, New York.Google Scholar
Costello, Julia G. 2014 A Typology of Mission Pottery: Drawings and Descriptions of Low-Fire Earthenwares from Mission San Antonio de Padua, California. In Ceramic Production in Early Hispanic California, edited by Skowronek, Russell K., Blackman, M. James, and Bishop, Ronald L., pp. 6992. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Crabtree, Robert H., and Warren, Claude N. 1977 A Chumash Pottery Jar. Journals of California Anthropology 4:118122.Google Scholar
Deagan, Kathleen 1998 Transculturation and Spanish American Ethnogenesis: The Archaeological Legacy of the Quincentenary. In Studies in Culture Contact: Interaction, Culture Change, and Archaeology, edited by Cusick, James G., pp. 126145. Occasional Papers No. 25. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Deetz, James F. 1963 Archaeological Investigations at La Purísima Mission. Archaeological Survey Annual Report 1962–1963:161244. University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Díaz-Andreu, G. Margarita, and Lucy, Sam 2005 Introduction. In The Archaeology of Identity: Approaches to Gender, Age, Status, Ethnicity and Religion, edited by Díaz-Andreu, G. Margarita, Lucy, Sam, Babić, Stasa, and Edwards, David N., pp. 112. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Dietler, Michael 2010 Archaeologies of Colonialism: Consumption, Entanglement, and Violence in Ancient Mediterranean France. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Eddy, John J. 2013 The Early Middle Period Stone Bead Interdependence Network. Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, California State University, Northridge.Google Scholar
Farris, Glenn J. 2014 Depriving God and the King of the Means of Charity: Early Nineteenth-Century Missionaries’ Views of Cattle Ranchers near Mission La Purísima, California. In Indigenous Landscapes and Spanish Missions: New Perspectives from Archaeology and Ethnohistory, edited by Panich, Lee M. and Schneider, Tsim D., pp. 135153. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Farris, Glenn J., and Johnson, John R. 1999 Prominent Indian Families at Mission La Purísima Concepción as Identified in Baptismal, Marriage, and Burial Records. Occasional Papers No. 3. California Mission Studies Association, Santa Barbara, California.Google Scholar
Ferris, Neal, Harrison, Rodney, and Wilcox, Michael V. (editors) 2015 Rethinking Colonial Pasts through Archaeology. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Gamble, Lynn H. 2008 The Chumash World at European Contact: Power, Trade, and Feasting among Complex Hunter-Gatherers. University of California Press, Berkeley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gamble, Lynn H. 2015 Subsistence Practices and Feasting Rites: Chumash Identity after European Colonization. Historical Archaeology 49 (2):115135.Google Scholar
Gardner, Andrew 2011 Paradox and Praxis in the Archaeology of Identity. In Identity Crisis: Archaeological Perspectives on Social Identity, edited by Amundsen-Meyer, Lindsay, Engel, Nicole, and Pickering, Sean, pp. 1126. University of Calgary, Alberta.Google Scholar
Geiger, Maynard J., and Meighan, Clement W. 1976 As the Padres Saw Them: California Indian Life and Customs as Reported by the Franciscan Missionaries, 1813–1815. Santa Barbara Mission Archive Library, Santa Barbara, California.Google Scholar
Glassow, Michael A., Johnson, John R., and Erlandson, Jon M. 1986 Mescalitan Island Archaeology and the Canaliño Period of Santa Barbara Channel Prehistory. In Symposium: A New Look at Some Old Sites: Papers from the Symposium Organized by Francis A. Riddell, edited by Riddell, Francis A., pp. 920. Archives of California Prehistory No. 6. Coyote Press, Salinas, California.Google Scholar
Gosden, Chris 2001 Postcolonial Archaeology: Issues of Culture, Identity, and Knowledge. In Archaeological Theory Today, edited by Hodder, Ian, pp. 241261. Polity Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Haas, Lisbeth 1995 Conquest and Historical Identities in California, 1769–1936. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Haas, Lisbeth 2014 Saints and Citizens: Indigenous Histories of Colonial Missions and Mexican California. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Hackel, Steven W. 2005 Children of the Coyote, Missionaries of Saint Francis: Indian Spanish Relations in Colonial California 1769–1850. Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Harrington, John P. 1928 The Mission Indians of Southern California. In Smithsonian Institution's Exploration and Field-Work of the Smithsonian Institution in 1927, pp. 173178. Government Printing Office, Washington DC.Google Scholar
Heizer, Robert F. (editor) 1978 California. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 8, Sturtevant, William C., general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Heizer, Robert F., and Treganza, Adan E. 1944 Mines and Quarries of the Indians of California. California Journal of Mines and Geology 40:291359.Google Scholar
Hodos, Tamar 2010 Local and Global Perspectives in the Study of Social and Cultural Identities. In Material Culture and Social Identities in the Ancient World, edited by Hales, Shelly and Hodos, Tamar, pp. 331. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hoover, Robert L. 1989 Spanish-Native Interaction and Acculturation in the Alta California Mission. In Archaeological and Historical Perspectives on the Spanish Borderlands West, edited by Hurst Thomas, David, pp. 395406. Columbian Consequences, Vol. 1. Smithsonian Institute Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Howard, Virginia 2000 Santa Catalina's Soapstone Vessels: Production Dynamics. In Proceedings of the Fifth California Islands Symposium, edited by Browne, David R., Mitchell, Kathryn L., and Chaney, Henry W., pp. 598606. CD-ROM, US Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Pacific OCS Region, Camarillo, California.Google Scholar
Hudson, Travis, and Blackburn, Thomas C. 1983 Food Preparation and Shelter. Anthropological Papers No. 27. The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction Sphere, Vol. 2, Blackburn, Thomas C., general editor, Ballena Press, Los Altos, California.Google Scholar
Humphrey, Richard V. 1965 The La Purísima Mission Cemetery. Annual Reports of the University of California Archaeological Survey 7:179192. University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Insoll, Timothy (editor) 2007 The Archaeology of Identities: A Reader. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Johnson, John R. 1982 An Ethnohistoric Study of the Island Chumash. Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara.Google Scholar
Johnson, John R. 2000 Social Responses to Climate Change among the Chumash Indians of South-Central California. In The Way the Wind Blows: Climate, History and Human Action, edited by McIntosh, Roderick J., Tainter, Joseph A., and Keech McIntosh, Susan, pp. 301327. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Jordan, Kurt A. 2009 Colonies, Colonialism, and Cultural Entanglement: The Archaeology of Postcolumbian Intercultural Relations. In International Handbook of Historical Archaeology, edited by Majewski, Teresita and Gaimster, David, pp. 3149. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Kennett, Douglas J. 2005 The Island Chumash: Behavioral Ecology of a Maritime Society. University of California Press, Berkeley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, Chester D. 1990 The Evolution of Chumash Society. A Comparative Study of Artifacts Used for Social System Maintenance in the Santa Barbara Channel Region before A.D. 1894. Garland, New York.Google Scholar
King, Chester D. 2011 Overview of the History of American Indians in the Santa Monica Mountains. Topanga Archaeological Consultants. Submitted to the National Park Service, Pacific West Region, Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, Los Angeles, California.Google Scholar
King, Linda B. 1982 Medea Creek Cemetery: Late Inland Chumash Patterns of Social Organization, Exchange, and Warfare. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Koerper, Henry C., Peterson, Polly A., Vargas, Benjamin R., Grenda, Donn R., and Stanton, Patrick B. 2011 Mortuary/Mourning Associated, Transversely Grooved Stone Artifacts from CA-LAN-62: Another Case of Sexualization-Sacralization? Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 40 (2):5179.Google Scholar
Law Pezzarossi, Heather 2014 Assembling Indigeneity: Rethinking Innovation, Tradition and Indigenous Materiality in a 19th-Century Native Toolkit. Journal of Social Archaeology 14:340360.Google Scholar
Liebmann, Mathew 2012 Revolt: An Archaeological History of Pueblo Resistance and Revitalization in 17th Century New Mexico. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Liebmann, Mathew 2015 The Mickey Mouse Kachina and Other “Double Objects”: The Hybridity in the Material Culture of Colonial Encounters. Journal of Social Archaeology 15:319341.Google Scholar
Liebmann, Matthew, and Murphy, Melissa S. (editors) 2011 Enduring Conquests: Rethinking the Archaeology of Resistance to Spanish Colonialism in the Americas. SAR Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Lightfoot, Kent G. 2005 Indians, Missionaries, and Merchants: The Legacy of Colonial Encounters on the California Frontiers. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Linton, Ralph 1944 North American Cooking Pots. American Antiquity 9:369380.Google Scholar
McCawley, William 1996 The First Angelinos: The Gabrielino Indians of Los Angeles. Ballena Press, Banning, California.Google Scholar
Milliken, Randall 1995 A Time of Little Choice: The Disintegration of Tribal Culture in the San Francisco Bay Area 1769–1810. Ballena Press, Menlo Park, California.Google Scholar
Mintz, Sidney W., and Du Bois, Christine M. 2002 The Anthropology of Food and Eating. Annual Review of Anthropology 31:99119.Google Scholar
Olson, Ronald R. 1930 Chumash Prehistory. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 28:121.Google Scholar
Orr, Phillip C. 1943 Archaeology of Mescalitan Island and the Customs of the Canaliño. Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History Occasional Papers No. 5. Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Santa Barbara, California.Google Scholar
Ortiz, Fernando 1995 On the Social Phenomenon of “Transculturation” and Its Importance in Cuba. Reprint. In Cuban Counterpoint: Tobacco and Sugar, translated by de Onís, Harriet, pp. 97102. Duke University Press, Durham, North Carolina. (Original Spanish edition published in 1940; original translation by Harriet de Onís published in 1947, Alfred A. Knopf, New York.)Google Scholar
Panich, Lee M. 2013 Archaeologies of Persistence: Reconsidering the Legacies of Colonialism in Native North America. American Antiquity 78:105122.Google Scholar
Panich, Lee M., and Schneider, Tsim D. 2015 Expanding Mission Archaeology: A Landscape Approach to Indigenous Autonomy in Colonial California. Journal of Anthropology Archaeology 40: 4858.Google Scholar
Panich, Lee M., and Schneider, Tsim D. (editors) 2014 Indigenous Landscapes and Spanish Missions: New Perspectives from Archaeology and Ethnohistory. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Popper, Virginia S. 2016 Change and Persistence: Mission Neophyte Foodways at Selected Colonial Alta California Institutions. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 36:525.Google Scholar
Putnam, Frederic W., Abbott, Charles C., Haldeman, Samuel S., Yarrow, Harry C., and Henshaw, Henry W. 1879 Archaeological and Ethnographic Collections from Vicinity of Santa Barbara, California from Ruined Pueblos of Arizona and New Mexico, and Certain Interior Tribes. In Archaeology, edited by Putnam, Frederick W.. Report upon Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth Meridian, Vol. VII, George M. Wheeler, supervisor, US Army, Office of the Chief of Engineers, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Rice, Prudence M. 1987 Pottery Analysis, a Sourcebook. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Rick, Torben C., Erlandson, Jon M., Vellanoweth, René L., and Braje, Todd J. 2005 From Pleistocene Mariners to Complex Hunter-Gatherers: The Archaeology of the California Channel Islands. Journal of World Prehistory 19:169228.Google Scholar
Romani, Gwen R. 1982 In Search of Soapstone. Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, California State University, Northridge.Google Scholar
Rosenthal, Jane, and Williams, Stephanie L. 1992 Some Southern California Soapstone Sources. Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology 5:219227.Google Scholar
Schumacher, Paul 1878 Ancient Olla Manufactory of Santa Catalina Island, California. American Naturalist 12:629.Google Scholar
Schumacher, Paul 1879 The Method and Manufacture of Soapstone Pots. In Archaeology, edited by Putnam, Frederick W., pp. 117121. Report upon Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth Meridian, Vol. VII, George M. Wheeler, supervisor, US Army, Office of the Chief of Engineers, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Silliman, Stephen W. 2005 Culture Contact or Colonialism? Challenges in the Archaeology of Native North America. American Antiquity 70:5575.Google Scholar
Silliman, Stephen W. 2009 Change and Continuity, Practice and Memory: Native American Persistence in Colonial New England. American Antiquity 74:211230.Google Scholar
Silliman, Stephen W. 2015 A Requiem for Hybridity? The Problem with Frankensteins, Purees, and Mules. Journal of Social Archaeology 15:277–198.Google Scholar
Smith, Stuart T. 2014 Identity. In The Oxford Handbook of Archaeological Theory, edited by Gardner, Andrew, Lake, Mark, and Sommer, Ulrike, pp. 119. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Stein, Gil 2005 The Archaeology of Colonial Encounters. SAR Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Strudwick, Ivan H. 2013 The Native Depopulation on Santa Catalina Island. In California's Channel Islands. The Archaeology of Human-Environment Interactions, edited by Jazwa, Christopher S. and Perry, Jennifer E., pp. 172189. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
van Dommelen, Peter 1998 On Colonial Grounds: A Comparative Study of Colonialism and Rural Settlement in First Millennium BC West Central Sardinia. Archaeological Studies No. 2. Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Voss, Barbara 2005 From Casta to Californio: Social Identity and the Archaeology of Culture Contact. American Anthropologist 107:461474.Google Scholar
Voss, Barbara 2008 The Archaeology of Ethnogenesis: Race and Sexuality in Colonial San Francisco. University of California Press, Berkeley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weide, David L. 1973 Earth Science and Archaeology. Society for California Archaeology Newsletter 7 (2):8.Google Scholar
Wlodarski, Robert J. 1979 Catalina Island Soapstone Manufacture. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 1:331355.Google Scholar
Wlodarski, Robert J., and Larson, Daniel A. 1976 Soapstone and Indian Missionization: Part II. In The Changing Faces of Main Street: Ventura Mission Plaza Archaeological Project, edited by Greenwood, Roberta S., pp. 3962. Redevelopment Agency, Ventura, California.Google Scholar
Wlodarski, Robert J., Romani, John F., Romani, Gwen R., and Larson, Daniel A. 1984 Preliminary Evidence of Metal Tool Use in Soapstone Quarry-Mining on Catalina Island: Jane Russell Quarry. Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 20 (3):3566.Google Scholar