This thesis is a study of indigenous communities in Southern New England during the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. The whaling industry serves as the setting to discuss and analyze how Native people adapted, redefined, and resisted the changes happening to their culture and communities and the geopolitical relationships they developed with both African and Anglo-Americans
During the forming of the early republic in late colonial New England, Anglo authors and intellectua...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1995In order to show how formulations of Indian identity ...
This paper proposes that a cross-tribal sense of belonging, similar to modern conceptions of racism,...
The focus of this dissertation is the post-colonial survivance of Indian people in the New England r...
This dissertation explores through what means, and with what effects on their societies, Native Amer...
In this paper, I bring together the historiography of Indigenous shore whaling on Long Island with n...
Nineteenth-century Native Americans from the northeastern United States became locally famous as mar...
America’s whaling industry serves as a microcosm of the interaction between white settlers and peopl...
This dissertation examines the structures and processes that underpin cultural formation at Otakou f...
Beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, colonial projects in southern New England sponsored dozens...
This study investigates the cultural meeting between the indigenous peoples of the Sulu Archipelago ...
The primary goal of this dissertation is to explore the nature of cultural change and continuity dur...
The primary aim of this thesis is to reconstruct the history of Aboriginal cultural associations wit...
107 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Political Science and the Clark Honors College of...
Marine mammal hunting developed to its peak on the Northwest Coast, among the only whaling people in...
During the forming of the early republic in late colonial New England, Anglo authors and intellectua...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1995In order to show how formulations of Indian identity ...
This paper proposes that a cross-tribal sense of belonging, similar to modern conceptions of racism,...
The focus of this dissertation is the post-colonial survivance of Indian people in the New England r...
This dissertation explores through what means, and with what effects on their societies, Native Amer...
In this paper, I bring together the historiography of Indigenous shore whaling on Long Island with n...
Nineteenth-century Native Americans from the northeastern United States became locally famous as mar...
America’s whaling industry serves as a microcosm of the interaction between white settlers and peopl...
This dissertation examines the structures and processes that underpin cultural formation at Otakou f...
Beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, colonial projects in southern New England sponsored dozens...
This study investigates the cultural meeting between the indigenous peoples of the Sulu Archipelago ...
The primary goal of this dissertation is to explore the nature of cultural change and continuity dur...
The primary aim of this thesis is to reconstruct the history of Aboriginal cultural associations wit...
107 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Political Science and the Clark Honors College of...
Marine mammal hunting developed to its peak on the Northwest Coast, among the only whaling people in...
During the forming of the early republic in late colonial New England, Anglo authors and intellectua...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1995In order to show how formulations of Indian identity ...
This paper proposes that a cross-tribal sense of belonging, similar to modern conceptions of racism,...