Some years ago, when I was taking a course with Dr. David Orr, Dr. Audrey Horning came to guest lecture for a day. For some time before that, I'd known I wanted to focus on Pine Barrens archaeology, and I'd known that I'd wanted to "reinvent" the popular cultural/historical view of the people who lived there -- the Pineys. I found that, with my then limited exposure to Pine Barrens historical sites, the archaeological picture did not fit with the expressed accounts which made Pineys out to be peripheral, disconnected, and uneducated. I also began developing a notion that folklore, such as the Jersey Devil, was being wrongly portrayed as a cultural product of mysticism and isolation, while I believed it to be more of resistance. But what did I know? No one seemed interested in my Marxist theories back then.
When Dr. Horning came to lecture, she spoke about her work in rural Appalachia. It may seem that there are not many similarities, but it was her lecture that forever changed the path of my archaeological career. She defined the same questions I'd been raising in my head about rural New Jersey archaeology, and gave me the beginnings of a framework for my research.
So, all that being said, if you are interested in the historical archaeology or in the history of Piney culture, you may well be interested in her book. As I said, it is not about New Jersey at all, but it is a striking example of how historical archaeology can change perceptions of culture on the whole.
"In the Shadow of Ragged Mountain: Historical Archaeology of Nicholson, Corbin, & Weakley Hollow" by Dr. Audrey Horning IS New Jersey archaeology to me.
When Dr. Horning came to lecture, she spoke about her work in rural Appalachia. It may seem that there are not many similarities, but it was her lecture that forever changed the path of my archaeological career. She defined the same questions I'd been raising in my head about rural New Jersey archaeology, and gave me the beginnings of a framework for my research.
So, all that being said, if you are interested in the historical archaeology or in the history of Piney culture, you may well be interested in her book. As I said, it is not about New Jersey at all, but it is a striking example of how historical archaeology can change perceptions of culture on the whole.
"In the Shadow of Ragged Mountain: Historical Archaeology of Nicholson, Corbin, & Weakley Hollow" by Dr. Audrey Horning IS New Jersey archaeology to me.