In 1688, the Karankawa Peoples abducted and adopted an eight-year-old Jean-Baptiste Talon from a French fort on the Texas Gulf Coast. Talon lived with these Native Americans for roughly two and a half years and related an eye-witness account of their cannibalism. Despite his testimony, some present-day scholars reject the Karankawas' cannibalism. Because of an abundance of farfetched and grisly accounts made by Spanish priests, bellicose Texans, and sensationalist historians, these academics believe the custom of anthropophagy is a colonial fabrication. Facing a sea of outrageously prejudicial sources, these scholars have either drowned in them or found no reason to wade deeper. Underneath the swamp of disinformation, historical truth is di...
Article explores the history of the Tonkawa people in Texas and Oklahoma and illuminates the negativ...
One of Mississippi's and the United States' most inhumane actions was the forced removal of American...
For centuries, Western explorers, missionaries, and travelers have been bringing home tales of canni...
Only a few decades ago a common perception prevailed that the historical Native Americans were very...
Series: USGZE AS333This essay aims to investigate and disprove the claims that the Lake Superior Chi...
Neil L. WHITEHEAD. Carib cannibalism. The historical evidence. Since the period of discovery the Spa...
Two prominent historians, David Cannadine and Brad Gregory, have recently contended that history is ...
In 1855 Native American chief Hinmuuttu-yalatlat (Old Joseph) was duped by the Government of the Un...
One afternoon, in August of 1881, the Sixth Cavalry of the US Army was nervously setting up camp alo...
Long before the founding of the Jamestown, Virginia, colony and its Starving Time of 1609-1610-one o...
The power of myth and storytelling is well-known in American Indian communities. Oral traditions con...
This article examines the published accounts of the circumstances that led to John Jamieson's 1827 t...
In the winter of 1609–10, Jamestown colonists struggled through a period that came to be known as th...
iii Andrew Schocket, Advisor This dissertation examines European writings about cannibalism in North...
This three-year project seeks to study the complex dialectics between voice and silence, forgetting ...
Article explores the history of the Tonkawa people in Texas and Oklahoma and illuminates the negativ...
One of Mississippi's and the United States' most inhumane actions was the forced removal of American...
For centuries, Western explorers, missionaries, and travelers have been bringing home tales of canni...
Only a few decades ago a common perception prevailed that the historical Native Americans were very...
Series: USGZE AS333This essay aims to investigate and disprove the claims that the Lake Superior Chi...
Neil L. WHITEHEAD. Carib cannibalism. The historical evidence. Since the period of discovery the Spa...
Two prominent historians, David Cannadine and Brad Gregory, have recently contended that history is ...
In 1855 Native American chief Hinmuuttu-yalatlat (Old Joseph) was duped by the Government of the Un...
One afternoon, in August of 1881, the Sixth Cavalry of the US Army was nervously setting up camp alo...
Long before the founding of the Jamestown, Virginia, colony and its Starving Time of 1609-1610-one o...
The power of myth and storytelling is well-known in American Indian communities. Oral traditions con...
This article examines the published accounts of the circumstances that led to John Jamieson's 1827 t...
In the winter of 1609–10, Jamestown colonists struggled through a period that came to be known as th...
iii Andrew Schocket, Advisor This dissertation examines European writings about cannibalism in North...
This three-year project seeks to study the complex dialectics between voice and silence, forgetting ...
Article explores the history of the Tonkawa people in Texas and Oklahoma and illuminates the negativ...
One of Mississippi's and the United States' most inhumane actions was the forced removal of American...
For centuries, Western explorers, missionaries, and travelers have been bringing home tales of canni...