Cornell University Emblemthe department of Anthropology
Faculty
Kurt A. Jordan
Office: McGraw 210
Phone: (607) 255-3109

Archaeology provides a perspective on Postcolumbian indigenous lives that both supplements and challenges document-based histories. My research centers on the archaeology of Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) peoples, emphasizing the settlement patterns, housing, and political economy of seventeenth and eighteenth century Senecas. The empirical evidence provided by archaeology can do much to combat inaccurate narratives of Indian decline and powerlessness that pervade scholarly and popular writing about Native Americans. For example, fieldwork at the 1715-1754 Seneca Townley-Read site near Geneva, New York, recovered data indicating substantial Seneca autonomy, selectivity, innovation, and opportunism in an era usually considered to be one of cultural disintegration.

My teaching interests include the archaeology of North American Indians, the global historical archaeology of indigenous peoples, the representation of Native American histories and cultures, political economy in archaeology, the North American fur trade, and hands-on training courses in archaeological excavation and laboratory analysis that tap into the rich archaeological resources of the Finger Lakes region.

Selected Publications

  The Seneca Restoration, 1715-1754: An Iroquois Local Political Economy. Gainesville: Society for Historical Archaeology and University Press of Florida. In press; publication expected August 2008.
  Colonies, Colonialism and Cultural Entanglement: The Archaeology of Postcolumbian Intercultural Relations. In Teresita Majewski and David Gaimster, editors: International Handbook of Historical Archaeology. New York: Springer. In press; publication expected June 2008.
  Regional Diversity and Colonialism in Eighteenth Century Iroquoia. In Timothy D. Knapp and Laurie E. Miroff, editors: Tipping the Scale: Levels of Analysis in Iroquoian Archaeology. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. In press; publication expected early 2008.
  Not Just 'One Site Against the World': Seneca Iroquois Intercommunity Connections and Autonomy, 1550-1779. In Laura L. Scheiber and Mark D. Mitchell, editors: Across the Great Divide: Continuity and Change in Native North American Societies, 1400-1900. In preparation; Amerind Seminar volume under consideration by the University of Arizona Press.
2004 Seneca Settlement Pattern, Community Structure, and Housing, 1677-1779. Northeast Anthropology 67:23-60.
2003 An Eighteenth Century Seneca Iroquois Short Longhouse from the Townley-Read Site, c. A.D. 1715-1754. The Bulletin: Journal of the New York State Archaeological Association 119: 49-63.
2002 Christopher N. Matthews, Mark P. Leone, and Kurt A. Jordan. The Political Economy of Archaeological Cultures: Marxism and American Historical Archaeology. Journal of Social Archaeology 2(1): 109-134.