See, for instance, Mark P. Leone, P.B. Potter Jr., and P.A. Shackel, “Toward a Critical Archaeology,” Current Anthropology28 (1987): 283-302; Parker B. Potter Jr., Public Archaeology in Annapolis: A Critical Approach to History in Maryland's Ancient City (Washington, D.C., 1994); and Christopher N. Matthews, An Archaeology of History and Tradition, Moments of Danger in the Annapolis Landscape (New York , 2002).
2.
David Lowenthal, The Past Is a Foreign Country (Cambridge, UK, 1985).
3.
See, for instance, M. Shanks and C. Tilley, Re-Constructing Archaeology: Theory and Practice (London, 1987); Ian Hodder, ed., Towards Reflexive Method in Archaeology: The Example at Catalhoyuk (Cambridge, 2000); and Christopher N. Matthews, An Archaeology of History and Tradition, Moments of Danger in the Annapolis Landscape (New York , 2002).
4.
Diana di Zerega Wall, “ Sacred Dinners and Secular Teas: Constructing Domesticity in Mid-19th-Century New York,” in Donna Seifert, ed., Gender in Historical Archaeology (1991): 69-89; and The Archaeology of Gender: Separating the Spheres in Urban America ( New York, 1994).
5.
Alan Mayne, Fever, Squalor, and Vice: Sanitation and Social Policy in Victorian Sydney (London, 1982); Representing the Slum, Urban History Yearbook (1990), 66-84; and The Imagined Slum, Newspaper Representation in Three Cities, 1870-1914 (Leicester, 1993).
6.
Henry Glassie, Passing the Time in Ballymenone, Culture and History of an Ulster Community (Philadelphia, 1982).
7.
See, for instance, chap. 7 in Charles E. Orser's A Historical Archaeology of the Modern World (New York, 1996).
8.
Mary C. Beaudry, Lauren J. Cook, and Stephen A. Mrozowski , “Artifacts and Active Voices: Material Culture as Social Discourse,” in Randall H. McGuire and Robert Paynter, eds., The Archaeology of Inequality (Baltimore, 1991), 150-91.
9.
Richard Veit and Paul W. Schopp, “Who's Been Drinking on the Railroad? Archaeological Excavations at the Central Railroad of New Jersey's Lakehurst Shops,” NortheastHistorical Archaeology28 (1999): 21-40.
10.
Charles E. Orser, A Historical Archaeology of the Modern World (New York , 1996), 173.
11.
Sean Wilentz, Chants Democratic: New York City and the Rise of the American Working Class, 1788-1850 (New York, 1984); Christine Stansell, City of Women: Sex and Class in New York, 1789-1860 (Urbana , 1987); Paul A. Gilje, The Road to Mobocracy: Popular Disorder in New York City, 1763-1834 (Chapel Hill , 1987); Elizabeth Blackmar, Manhattan for Rent, 1785-1850 (Ithaca, 1989); Richard B. Stott, Workers in the Metropolis: Class, Ethnicity and Youth in Antebellum New York City (Ithaca, 1990); Timothy L. Gilfoyle, City of Eros: New York City, Prostitution, and the Commercialization of Sex, 1790-1920 (New York, 1992); Marilynn Wood Hill, Their Sisters' Keepers: Prostitution in New York City 1830-1870 ( Berkeley, 1993); and Ronald H. Bayor and Timothy J. Meagher, The New York Irish (Baltimore, 1996). 12. Carol Groneman Pernicone, “`The Bloody Ould Sixth': A Social Analysis of a New York City Working-Class Community in the Mid-Nineteenth Century” (PhD dissertation, Department of History, University of Rochester, 1973).