Conflict and cooperation have shaped the American Southwest since prehistoric times. For centuries indigenous groups and, later, Spaniards, French, and Anglo-Americans met, fought, and collaborated with one another in this border area stretching from Texas through southern California. To explore the region’s complex past from prehistory to the U.S. takeover, this book uses an unusual multidisciplinary approach. In interviews with ten experts, Deborah and Jon Lawrence discuss subjects ranging from warfare among the earliest ancestral Puebloans to intermarriage and peonage among Spanish settlers and the Indians they encountered. The scholars interviewed form a distinguished array of archaeologists, anthropologists, ethnohistorians, and historians: Juliana Barr, Brian DeLay, Richard and Shirley Flint, John Kessell, Steven LeBlanc, Mark Santiago, Polly Schaafsma, David J. Weber, and Michael Wilcox. All speak forthrightly about complex and controversial issues, and they do so with minimal academic jargon and temporizing, bringing the most reliable information to bear on every subject they discuss. Themes the authors address include the origin and scope of conflicts between ethnic groups and the extent of accommodation, cooperation, and cross-cultural adaptation that also ensued. Seven interviews explore how Indians forced colonizers to modify their behavior. All of the experts explain how they deal with incomplete or biased sources to achieve balanced interpretations. As the authors point out, no single discipline provides a complete, accurate historical picture. Spanish documents must be sifted for political and ideological distortion, the archaeological record is incomplete, and oral traditions erode and become corrupted over time. By assembling the most articulate practitioners of all three approaches, the authors have produced a book that will speak to general readers as well as scholars and students in a variety of fields.
"Rooted in Gloria Anzaldúa's experience as a Chicana, a lesbian, an activist, and a writer, the essays and poems in this volume profoundly challenged, and continue to challenge, how we...
1. -- Introduction: Russia's Deep Borders in the Making -- 2.
At approximately 8:00 p.m., McCoy took Gómez from the cell, tied a small chain around his neck, and led him, with the help of Wilford Wilson, to the home of G. W. Penny. Wilson stayed there with the boy as McCoy left the house to secure ...
The material act of breathing heavy, at the border of life and death, represents the starting point of Hemphill's reflection on the meaning of black life in the white supremacist West and the price one has to pay when pledging ...
over 6,000 monasteries, brutalised and killed over 110,000 monks and nuns and used force to disrobe another 250,000 monks and nuns.34 Some Chinese scholars, however, contest this view and say that the figures are actually absurd.
Stranger Intimacy reveals the intersections between capitalism, the state's treatment of immigrants, sexual citizenship, and racism in the first half of the twentieth century.
Rethinking the Borderlands is an insightful and provocative exploration of the ways Chicano and Chicana artists, writers, musicians, and filmmakers engage this history in order to resist the disenfranchising effects of legal institutions, ...
Turnbull, Stephen R. & Steve Noon. 2009. Chinese Walled Cities 221 BC–AD 1644. ... Tuttle, Gray & Kurtis R. Schaeffer. 2013. ... Vogel, Ezra. 1969. Canton Under Communism: Programs and Politics in a Provincial Capital, 1949–1968.
Reid, A.M. and Lane, P.J. (eds), African Historical Archaeologies (New York, 2004). Reid, R.L., Always a River: The Ohio River and ... Sopher, D., The Sea Nomads: A Study of the Maritime Boat People of Southeast Asia (Singapore, 1977).
In addition, Sara's mother, Beatrice, utilizes the exhibit of pre-Hispanic artifacts as a teaching device to instruct ... representational practices that Karen Mary Dávalos studies in her work Exhibiting Mestizaje: Mexican (American) ...