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INDIGENOUS HISTORY AND IMPERIAL AMERICA: AMERICAN INDIAN HISTORY TODAY AND TOMORROW

Daggar, Lori J.

Reviews in American History, 2017-09, Vol.45 (3), p.378-383 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press

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  • Título:
    INDIGENOUS HISTORY AND IMPERIAL AMERICA: AMERICAN INDIAN HISTORY TODAY AND TOMORROW
  • Autor: Daggar, Lori J.
  • Assuntos: Anthologies ; Colonialism ; Essays ; Gender ; Genocide ; Handbooks ; Handbooks, manuals, etc ; Historians ; History ; Hoxie, Frederick E., ---- editor ; Indians of North America ; Native North Americans ; Scholars ; Women
  • É parte de: Reviews in American History, 2017-09, Vol.45 (3), p.378-383
  • Descrição: While a concluding essay may have added to the collection, the Handbook's last piece on global history by Michael Witgen, does, in many ways, offer a fitting capstone to a work whose central goals are to point the way forward for the field and explicitly link Native American histories with those of indigenous peoples worldwide. Since it is impossible to do justice to all of the essays included, I will instead discuss only a sampling. Not only does such analysis move considerations of intellectual history and production beyond the written word, it pushes the established chronological boundaries for these intellectual histories as well, creating a compelling arc that ranges from pre-European contact to the recent formation of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association (NAISA). [...]Child's "Gender, Sexuality, and Family History: Naynaabeak's Fishing Net" offers an exploration of the intersection of gender, labor, and policy that challenges those who bemoan the dearth of sources relating to Native women's experiences. A growing number of voices are insisting, for example, that historians and the public should view not only U.S.-Native relations but indigenous peoples' experiences through the lens of genocide-government-pursued policies being central to that argument.2 We should, however, continue to explore how Native Americans confronted, shifted, and endured those multifaceted efforts, and we should continue to examine as well the histories of various peoples and their experiences in North America in order to further integrate the New Indian history, indigenous history, and imperial history.
  • Editor: Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Idioma: Inglês

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