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Broken Chains and Subverted Plans: Ethnicity, Race, and Commodities
Christopher Fennell
Anthropology
African American Studies
College of Law
Landscape Architecture
Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory
Lemann Center for Brazilian Studies
Center for African Studies
Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies
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Keyphrases
Race-ethnicity
100%
Illinois
100%
Virginia
100%
Economic System
100%
African American
50%
Nineteenth Century
50%
Midwest
50%
Miller
50%
Philadelphia
50%
Cohesiveness
50%
Social Networks
50%
Carpenter
50%
Consumer Preferences
50%
Urban Centers
50%
Local Community
50%
Archaeology
50%
Social Market
50%
Brooklyn
50%
Ethnic Affiliation
50%
Structural Racism
50%
Capitalist
50%
Economic Value
50%
Agricultural Commodities
50%
Grove
50%
Buying
50%
Mid-Atlantic United States
50%
Equal Rights
50%
Manufactured Goods
50%
Ripple Effect
50%
Aversive Racism
50%
Backcountry
50%
Consumer Economy
50%
Global Factors
50%
Resource Value
50%
Channel Resource
50%
German Immigrants
50%
Blacksmith
50%
Social Racism
50%
Ethnic Traditions
50%
Local Store
50%
Global Commodity Chains
50%
Frontier Regions
50%
Ceramic Ware
50%
Ledger
50%
Account Books
50%
Arts and Humanities
Global
100%
Racial
100%
Local
100%
Ethnicity And Race
100%
Nineteenth Century
50%
Transatlantic
50%
Urban
50%
Expression
50%
Structure
50%
Tradition
50%
Frontier
50%
Dynamics
50%
Case Study
50%
Archeology
50%
Brooklyn
50%
Stylistics
50%
Atlantic
50%
Social Network
50%
Woodworkers
50%
Blacksmith
50%
Century Virginia
50%
account books
50%
Social Sciences
Economic Systems
100%
Case Study
50%
Boundaries
50%
German
50%
Equal Opportunity
50%
Consumer Preference
50%
Communities
50%
Archeology
50%
Development Plans
50%
Nineteenth Century
50%
Investors
50%
Agricultural Products
50%
Economic Value
50%