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dispossession

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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2000) 47 (1): 259–260.
Published: 01 January 2000
... 259 Dispossession by Degrees: Indian Land and Identity in Natick, Massachu- setts, 1650–1790. By Jean M. O’Brien. (Cambridge: Cambridge Univer- sity Press, 1997. xiii + 224 pp., illustrations, prologue, conclusion. £35.00...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2017) 64 (2): 339–340.
Published: 01 April 2017
...Brandi Hilton-Hagemann Encounter on the Great Plains: Scandinavian Settlers and the Dispossession of Dakota Indians, 1890–1930 . By Hansen Karen V. . ( Oxford : Oxford University Press , 2013 . vii+332 pp., acknowledgments, introduction, illustrations, bibliography, index . $36.95...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2020) 67 (4): 679–680.
Published: 01 October 2020
...Craig Yirush Property and Dispossession: Natives, Empires, and Land in Early Modern North America . By Allan Greer . ( Cambridge : Cambridge University Press , 2018 . xvii+450 pp., maps, illustrations, acknowledgments, index. $99.99 hardcover.) Copyright 2020 by American Society...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (3): 407–408.
Published: 01 July 2023
...Zachary Conn [email protected] Unworthy Republic: The Dispossession of Native Americans and the Road to Indian Territory . By Claudio Saunt . ( New York : W. W. Norton , 2020 . 416 pp., $16.95 paperback.). Copyright 2023 by American Society for Ethnohistory 2023...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2007) 54 (3): 557–558.
Published: 01 July 2007
...Tim Alan Garrison Conquest by Law: How the Discovery of America Dispossessed Indigenous Peoples of Their Lands. By Lindsay G. Robertson. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. xiii + 239 pp., acknowledgments, introduction, illustrations, bibliography, index. $29.95 cloth.) American Society...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2024) 71 (1): 113–138.
Published: 01 January 2024
...Robert Christensen Abstract Argentina’s 1879–85 Desert Campaign formed the basis for dispossessing the Indigenous community of its southern frontier. This article argues that the Desert Campaign should be understood as much as an epidemiological event as a military one, focusing on the most intense...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2009) 56 (4): 651–667.
Published: 01 October 2009
...Dawn Marsh The history of indigenous Pennsylvania and William Penn's peaceable kingdom is often considered an exception to the standard narrative of violence, dispossession, and conquest in the broader account of colonial North America. The story of Hannah Freeman, a Lenape woman who lived...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2015) 62 (1): 61–94.
Published: 01 January 2015
... trends as tribal land dispossession and changing notions of tribal citizenship reshaped Indian communities on and off the reservations during the colonial period. In addition to the regional population analysis, other record groups are used to detail the histories of several nonreservation Indian...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2011) 58 (1): 1–35.
Published: 01 January 2011
..., by which colonialism dispossessed. Vancouver the Cannibal: Cuisine, Encounter, and the Dilemma of Difference on the Northwest Coast, 1774–1808 Coll Thrush, University of British Columbia Abstract. Food is fundamental. As Felipe Fernández-Armesto has written, food “has a good claim...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2021) 68 (2): 215–236.
Published: 01 April 2021
...Margaret Huettl Abstract Ojibwe leaders negotiated treaties with the United States amid nineteenth-century encroachments on their territory. These treaties, which were more than tools of dispossession, enfolded and extended aadizookanag (sacred stories) in agreements that embodied Ojibwe...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2022) 69 (2): 197–221.
Published: 01 April 2022
... opportunities for income and social mobility in a context of dispossession and proletarianization while contributing to socioeconomic stratification. In a region where the traditional agricultural base declined during the twentieth century, participation in wage labor provided a source of regular cash income...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (2): 167–185.
Published: 01 April 2023
... dispossession by creating the Treaty of Waitangi Tribunal in 1975, an institution that a decade later took a wide-ranging approach to the investigation of historical grievances. The tribunal produced an alternative historiography that imagined a partnership between Māori and the Crown, not only in the service...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2017) 64 (3): 345–377.
Published: 01 July 2017
... dispossession spurred further mobility but did not displace their identity as White Earth Ojibwes. Copyright 2017 by American Society for Ethnohistory 2017 White Earth Ojibwes allotment family history mobility This is a White Earth family story. When I was a kid, one of the fixtures of my...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (4): 554–555.
Published: 01 October 2023
...Michael Borsk At its best, Brophy’s book troubles rigid accounts of exploitation, dispossession, and the link that capital maintains between the two. And like most trouble, it calls out for change, both in our understandings of colonialism and in the world that colonialism has made. Yet...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2018) 65 (3): 535–536.
Published: 01 July 2018
... cloth.) Copyright 2018 by American Society for Ethnohistory 2018 Brandi Denison’s Ute Land Religion in the American West is an engaging study of cultural memory and Indigenous dispossession in Colorado. Intrigued by the “Meeker Massacre Pageant” performed in Meeker, Colorado, Denison sought...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (4): 562–563.
Published: 01 October 2023
...John William Nelson Ultimately, this book aims to illuminate the double original sin of the United States, placing Indigenous colonization and dispossession alongside racialized slavery to show how exclusionary policies based on whiteness shaped the new nation. In the latter chapters of the book...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2022) 69 (1): 129–130.
Published: 01 January 2022
... of the phenomenon itself but in his framing of race shifting and the self-Indigenization movement as part of broader patriarchal white supremacist structures of colonial dispossession, even beyond Leroux’s identification of the roots of many of these so-called Indigenous groups in white supremacist organizations...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2021) 68 (2): 354–355.
Published: 01 April 2021
... make meaning of the past as distinct from the concrete matter of what actually happened” (7). O’Brien brilliantly addressed these themes in her earlier work on settler colonialism in New England, where displacement of Indigenous people from local history went hand in hand with dispossessing them from...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2021) 68 (1): 159–160.
Published: 01 January 2021
.... By highlighting the preremoval period and more closely examining postremoval Native America through the Civil War, Ostler challenges us to broaden the spectrum of genocidal policy and military actions, as well as settler practices, to include dispossession and its entangled relationship with disease, demography...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (1): 119–120.
Published: 01 January 2023
... a commitment to the specificity of place, space, society, population, and period are necessary for histories of colonial dispossession and settlement. Even in those pieces written before he had the term, Harris focuses squarely on “that form of colonialism associated with immigrants who became the dominant...