Across a Great Divide

Across a Great Divide
Author :
Publisher : University of Arizona Press
Total Pages : 354
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780816528714
ISBN-13 : 0816528713
Rating : 4/5 (713 Downloads)

Book Synopsis Across a Great Divide by : Laura L. Scheiber

Download or read book Across a Great Divide written by Laura L. Scheiber and published by University of Arizona Press. This book was released on 2010-02-15 with total page 354 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Archaeological research is uniquely positioned to show how native history and native culture affected the course of colonial interaction, but to do so it must transcend colonialist ideas about Native American technological and social change. This book applies that insight to five hundred years of native history. Using data from a wide variety of geographical, temporal, and cultural settings, the contributors examine economic, social, and political stability and transformation in indigenous societies before and after the advent of Europeans and document the diversity of native colonial experiences. The book’s case studies range widely, from sixteenth-century Florida, to the Great Plains, to nineteenth-century coastal Alaska. The contributors address a series of interlocking themes. Several consider the role of indigenous agency in the processes of colonial interaction, paying particular attention to gender and status. Others examine the ways long-standing native political economies affected, and were in turn affected by, colonial interaction. A third group explores colonial-period ethnogenesis, emphasizing the emergence of new native social identities and relations after 1500. The book also highlights tensions between the detailed study of local cases and the search for global processes, a recurrent theme in postcolonial research. If archaeologists are to bridge the artificial divide separating history from prehistory, they must overturn a whole range of colonial ideas about American Indians and their history. This book shows that empirical archaeological research can help replace long-standing models of indigenous culture change rooted in colonialist narratives with more nuanced, multilinear models of change—and play a major role in decolonizing knowledge about native peoples.


Across a Great Divide Related Books

Across a Great Divide
Language: en
Pages: 354
Authors: Laura L. Scheiber
Categories: Social Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2010-02-15 - Publisher: University of Arizona Press

GET EBOOK

Archaeological research is uniquely positioned to show how native history and native culture affected the course of colonial interaction, but to do so it must t
Across the Great Divide
Language: en
Pages: 382
Authors: Bronwen Douglas
Categories: Social Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2013-12-19 - Publisher: Routledge

GET EBOOK

Across the Great Divide tracks a Pacific historian's fruitful, ambivalent engagements with History and Anthropology, anticipating experiments in each discipline
Across the Great Divide
Language: en
Pages: 324
Authors: Matthew Basso
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2013-10-18 - Publisher: Routledge

GET EBOOK

In Across the Great Divide, some of our leading historians look to both the history of masculinity in the West and to the ways that this experience has been rep
Across the Great Divide
Language: en
Pages: 118
Authors:
Categories: Photography
Type: BOOK - Published: 2010-12-16 - Publisher: University of New Mexico Press

GET EBOOK

In 1969 Roberta Price received a grant and traveled west to explore and photograph the communes that had begun to spring up in New Mexico and Colorado. Over the
Across the Great Divide the
Language: en
Pages: 382
Authors: Michael Ross
Categories: Fiction
Type: BOOK - Published: 2019-05-14 - Publisher: Elm Hill

GET EBOOK

Lexington, Kentucky, 1859. After saving John Hunt Morgan from a puma attack, fifteen-year-old farm boy Will Crump joins Hunt’s militia, the Lexington Rifles.