Across a Great Divide: Continuity and Change in Native North American Societies, 1400-1900
In: Amerind Studies in Archaeology Ser v.v. 4
Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- 1. Crossing Divides: Archaeology as Long-Term History -- 2. Agency and Practice in Apalachee Province -- 3. Long-Term History, Positionality, Contingency, Hybridity: Does Rethinking Indigenous History Reframe the Jamestown Colony? -- 4. When Moral Economies and Capitalism Meet: Creek Factionalism and the Colonial Southeastern Frontier -- 5. Not Just "One Site Against the World": Seneca Iroquois Intercommunity Connections and Autonomy, 1550-1779 -- 6. A Prophet Has Arisen: The Archaeology of Nativism among the Nineteenth-Century Algonquin Peoples of Illinois -- 7. Mountain Shoshone Technological Transitions across the Great Divide -- 8. The Plains Hide Trade: French Impact on Wichita Technology and Society -- 9. "Like Butterflies on a Mounting Board": Pueblo Mobility and Demography before 1825 -- 10. The Diné at the Edge of History: Navajo Ethnogenesis in the Northern Southwest, 1500-1750 -- 11. A Cross-Cultural Study of Colonialism and Indigenous Foodways in Western North America -- 12. Identity Collectives and Religious Colonialism in Coastal Western Alaska -- 13. Crossing, Bridging, and Transgressing Divides in the Study of Native North America -- References Cited -- About the Contributors -- Index.