Before getting into my admittedly narrowly constructed remarks, I wish the reader to understand that overall this volume is a good and useful one. Despite its claim to be an examination of the Regional History of the Forty-ninth Parallel, most of the nineteen essays focus exclusively on Great Plains history (about six have a decidedly non-Plains focus, while a few address more general area-wide topics). The value of the book is in its commitment to exploring how the imposition of the border affected people throughout the region, given the reality that no natural physical features exist to mark such an arbitrary division of peoples referred to as Children of a Common Mother on the Peace Arch straddling the Washington-British Columbia b...
Primarily derived from a March 2001 conference held in Regina, Saskatchewan, these essays present di...
Many are aware of Andrew Jackson\u27s Indian Removal policy, which uprooted Native Americans from th...
This is a strange book, in part because the author does not seem to recognize the massive amount of ...
Before getting into my admittedly narrowly constructed remarks, I wish the reader to understand that...
Collectively the eight essays in One West, Two Myths provide readers with a solid introduction to th...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
Essays on the Historical Geography of the Canadian West is a fine example of a department\u27s contr...
To me what is most important is to come to grips with both colonial history and contemporary life, ...
While the merging of historical and anthropological outlooks has been a productive trend in Plains I...
This collection of essays focuses on a specific group of Euro-Canadians: those who recognized injus...
People will think spatially and historically, observes Ayers in his essay on Southern identity for ...
On the first page of this encyclopedic essay on North American Indian history, the reader learns tha...
The textbook Conquests & Consequences provides a cohesive narrative framed by the question: How does...
One learns to be suspicious of essay collections. Not only does article quality usually vary, but of...
Review of: The Interior Borderlands: Regional Identity in the Midwest and Great Plains, edited by Jo...
Primarily derived from a March 2001 conference held in Regina, Saskatchewan, these essays present di...
Many are aware of Andrew Jackson\u27s Indian Removal policy, which uprooted Native Americans from th...
This is a strange book, in part because the author does not seem to recognize the massive amount of ...
Before getting into my admittedly narrowly constructed remarks, I wish the reader to understand that...
Collectively the eight essays in One West, Two Myths provide readers with a solid introduction to th...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
Essays on the Historical Geography of the Canadian West is a fine example of a department\u27s contr...
To me what is most important is to come to grips with both colonial history and contemporary life, ...
While the merging of historical and anthropological outlooks has been a productive trend in Plains I...
This collection of essays focuses on a specific group of Euro-Canadians: those who recognized injus...
People will think spatially and historically, observes Ayers in his essay on Southern identity for ...
On the first page of this encyclopedic essay on North American Indian history, the reader learns tha...
The textbook Conquests & Consequences provides a cohesive narrative framed by the question: How does...
One learns to be suspicious of essay collections. Not only does article quality usually vary, but of...
Review of: The Interior Borderlands: Regional Identity in the Midwest and Great Plains, edited by Jo...
Primarily derived from a March 2001 conference held in Regina, Saskatchewan, these essays present di...
Many are aware of Andrew Jackson\u27s Indian Removal policy, which uprooted Native Americans from th...
This is a strange book, in part because the author does not seem to recognize the massive amount of ...