Lumbee Indian histories : race, ethnicity, and Indian identity in the southern United States

書誌事項

Lumbee Indian histories : race, ethnicity, and Indian identity in the southern United States

Gerald M. Sider

(Culture and class in anthropology and history, v. 2)

Cambridge University Press, 1993

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 12

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 288-306) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book explores the dynamics of the struggle for racial and ethnic identities in the southern United States, focusing on the Lumbee Indians of North Carolina. The book is also a history of American Indian concepts and visions of history, starting with the contemporary period and with the perspectives of the Lumbee Indians, and working backward to the colonial period and to the major groupings of Indian peoples. The book addresses the key question of how differing interpretations of history cause traditionally oppressed peoples to continue their struggle. Lumbee Indian Histories is a part of a larger project, centred at the Max Planck Institut fur Geschichte, in Gottingen, Germany, to create new methodological approaches to, and concepts for, an historical anthropology.

目次

  • Preface
  • Part I. Introduction: 1. Within and against history
  • 2. Toward and past recognition
  • 3. Elements of the known
  • Part II. Embers of Hope: 4. Challenge to respect
  • 5. The fires of race
  • 6. The Embers of hope, incorporated
  • Part III. 'Root Hog to Die': 7. Prospect and loss
  • 8. The original 22
  • 9. Henry Berry Lowrie Lives Forever
  • Part IV. 'Now our Inmates': Colonial Formations and Formation Heritage: 10. Six pounds of paint to encourage the Indians: the origins of native vulnerability
  • 11. Distinguishing the headman: the history of local histories
  • 12. 'This isn't Burger King' vs. '31 pages of unalphabetized Locklears'
  • Conclusions: living Indian histories
  • Bibliographic essay
  • Index.

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