Fr. 96.00

American Encounters - Natives Newcomers From European Contact to Indian Removal, 15001850

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

Zusatztext "...the authors emphasize the creativity of many persons in many Indian societies in dealing with the opportunities as well as the problems of often catastrophic intersocial exchange. [American Encounters's] selection of classics well repays the energetic reader." -- Journal of the Early Republic". . . beautifully presented volume . . .appeal[s] to anyone interested in the strides forward Native American history has taken in the past generation! and it would serve as an excellent textbook for upper-division undergraduate courses in colonial history of Native American studies." -- Military History"A collection of 25 outstanding articles...conveniently consolidates important scholarship that the nonspecialist may overlook...Highly recommended for public libraries and essential for academic libraries with Native American collections." -- Library Journal"This carefully constructed set of essays showcases the work of a generation of historians who have raised the study of Native Americans to an entirely new plane. By taking a continent-wide approach! the editors have given students the opportunity to plumb the myriad experiences arising out of 300 years of Indian-European encounters." -- Gary B. Nash! UCLA"A stunning collection that encompasses--and organizes--the depth and diversity of the very best recent writing on Indian-European relations! American Encounters is tailor-made for both classroom use and scholarly reference." -- Philip Deloria! University of Colorado"The issues and approaches outlined in these writings will introduce students to the diversity and complexity of colonial encounters and cultural interactions from Canada to California across more than three centuries...An impressive array of essays representing the best literature in the ethnohistory of early America." -- Colin G. Calloway! Professor of History and Native American Studies! Dartmouth College"Coming to grips with the complexity of 'the Native American experience' in the early period of European settlement and expansion in North America is a daunting challenge to students and instructors alike. Happily! this diverse collection of innovative and insightful essays illuminates a great many dimensions of that experience. It will help us all grasp the depth and variety of this fascinating and important subject." -- Frederick E. Hoxie! University of Illinois! Urbana-Champaign"This collection of thought-provoking essays reflects the cutting-edge of scholarship in Native American history. The volume should become a standard text in any course that focuses upon Native American history in the ante-bellum period. The essays discuss many of the primary issues which have delineated scholarship in this field! and they are written by respected scholars. They should generate considerable classroom discussion. Highly recommended." -- R. David Edmunds! Watson Professor of American History! University of Texas at Dallas"This collection of articles adds a much needed dimension to the study of Native Americans. Whereas much of the historiography of the United States treats Indians as mere subjects of conquest! this work demonstrates that they usually possessed a degree of agency far in excess of that normally assumed. The articles also add depth and scope to the study of Native Americans as well as the United States as a whole by depicting American existence both before the arrival of Columbus and beyond the periphery of white settlement and expansion." -- American Studies in Scandinavia David Harding! University of Aarhus Informationen zum Autor Peter C. Mancall is Professor of History and Anthropology at the University of Southern California and Director of the USC-Huntington Early Modern Studies Institute. He is the author of several books, including Deadly Medicine: Indians and Alcohol in Early America and Hakluyt’s Promise: An Elizabethan’s Obsession for an English America. James H. Merrell

List of contents

1. Indians' Old World: Native Americans and the Coming of Europeans  2. Indians' New World: The Catawba Experience  Part One: Contact Arenas  Demography and Disease  3. Virgin Soils Revisited  Ideology and Spirituality  4. Iroquois Women, European Women  5. Women, Kin, and Catholicism:  New Perspectives on the Fur Trade  6. The Berdache and the Illinois Indian  7. Indians, Missionaries, and Religious Translation: Creating Wampanoag Christianity in Seventeenth-Century Martha's Vineyard  8. Dreaming of the Savior's Blood: Moravians and the Indian Great Awakening in Pennsylvania  9. Of Missionaries and their Cattle: Ojibwa Perceptions of a Missionary as Evil Shaman  Economy and Exchange  10. Encounters with Spirits:  Ojibwa and Dakota Theories Regarding the French and their Merchandise  11. King Philip's Herds: Indians, Colonists, and the Problem of Livestock in Early New England  12. Bewitching Tyranny of Custom: Social Costs of Indian Drinking in Colonial America  13. Frontier Exchange Economy Lower Mississippi  14. First Whalemen Nantucket  15. 'White & Clean' and Contested: Creek Towns and Trading Paths in the Aftermath of the Seven Years' War  16. The Rise and Fall of Plains Indian Horse Cultures  Diplomacy and Warfare  17. A Diplomacy of Gender: Rituals of First Contact in the 'Land of the Tejas'  18. War and Culture: The Iroquois Experience  19. 'A Little Flesh We Offer You':  The Origins of Indian Slavery in New France  20. The White Indians of Colonial America  21. 'This Evil Extends Especially to the Feminine Sex': Negotiating Captivity in the New Mexico Borderlands  22. Dressing for Success on the Mohawk Frontier  Part Two: From Revolution to Removal, and Beyond  23. Thinking and Believing: Nativism and Unity in the Ages of Pontiac and Tecumseh  24. The Right to a Name  25. Taking Account of Property: Stratification among the Creek Indians in the Early Nineteenth Century  26. The Staff of Leadership  27. 'More Motley than Mackinaw': From Ethnic Mixing to Ethnic Cleansing on the Frontier of the Lower Missouri, 1783-1833  28. Winning of the West

Report

"...the authors emphasize the creativity of many persons in many Indian societies in dealing with the opportunities as well as the problems of often catastrophic intersocial exchange. [American Encounters's] selection of classics well repays the energetic reader." -- Journal of the Early Republic
". . . beautifully presented volume . . .appeal[s] to anyone interested in the strides forward Native American history has taken in the past generation, and it would serve as an excellent textbook for upper-division undergraduate courses in colonial history of Native American studies." -- Military History
"A collection of 25 outstanding articles...conveniently consolidates important scholarship that the nonspecialist may overlook...Highly recommended for public libraries and essential for academic libraries with Native American collections." -- Library Journal
"This carefully constructed set of essays showcases the work of a generation of historians who have raised the study of Native Americans to an entirely new plane. By taking a continent-wide approach, the editors have given students the opportunity to plumb the myriad experiences arising out of 300 years of Indian-European encounters." -- Gary B. Nash, UCLA
"A stunning collection that encompasses--and organizes--the depth and diversity of the very best recent writing on Indian-European relations, American Encounters is tailor-made for both classroom use and scholarly reference." -- Philip Deloria, University of Colorado
"The issues and approaches outlined in these writings will introduce students to the diversity and complexity of colonial encounters and cultural interactions from Canada to California across more than three centuries...An impressive array of essays representing the best literature in the ethnohistory of early America." -- Colin G. Calloway, Professor of History and Native American Studies, Dartmouth College
"Coming to grips with the complexity of 'the Native American experience' in the early period of European settlement and expansion in North America is a daunting challenge to students and instructors alike. Happily, this diverse collection of innovative and insightful essays illuminates a great many dimensions of that experience. It will help us all grasp the depth and variety of this fascinating and important subject." -- Frederick E. Hoxie, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
"This collection of thought-provoking essays reflects the cutting-edge of scholarship in Native American history. The volume should become a standard text in any course that focuses upon Native American history in the ante-bellum period. The essays discuss many of the primary issues which have delineated scholarship in this field, and they are written by respected scholars. They should generate considerable classroom discussion. Highly recommended." -- R. David Edmunds, Watson Professor of American History, University of Texas at Dallas
"This collection of articles adds a much needed dimension to the study of Native Americans. Whereas much of the historiography of the United States treats Indians as mere subjects of conquest, this work demonstrates that they usually possessed a degree of agency far in excess of that normally assumed. The articles also add depth and scope to the study of Native Americans as well as the United States as a whole by depicting American existence both before the arrival of Columbus and beyond the periphery of white settlement and expansion." -- American Studies in Scandinavia David Harding, University of Aarhus

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.