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Brothers Among Nations Cynthia Van Zandt (Associate Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, University of New Hampshire, USA)

Brothers Among Nations By Cynthia Van Zandt (Associate Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, University of New Hampshire, USA)

Summary

Brothers Among Nations represents an effort to show how central Natives were to the European colonial project by demonstrating that the formation of alliances was the only way for the nascent colonies to succeed.

Brothers Among Nations Summary

Brothers Among Nations: The Pursuit of Intercultural Alliances in Early America, 1580-1660 by Cynthia Van Zandt (Associate Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, University of New Hampshire, USA)

In the past generation, scholars' understanding of relations among the peoples in the eastern portion of the North American mainland during the colonial era has been transformed by studies that have put the Native Americans' experiences at the center of the story instead of the periphery. Cynthia Van Zandt's work represents an effort to show how central Natives were to the European colonial project by demonstrating that the formation of alliances was the only way for the nascent colonies to succeed. Van Zandt argues that the growing number of transplanted Africans in the colonies demanded that Europeans effectively create alliances with them, though they were unequal alliances between free and enslaved peoples. Her study is unusual in that it brings together Indian and colonial peoples from a range of different Indian and European nations, focusing not just on one colony but on New England, Virginia, and the middle colonies together.

Brothers Among Nations Reviews

Early intercultural encounters in North America have been encased in a nationalistic mythology that presents the colonizers as strong, confident, and culturally superior to the natives, who are portrayed as child-like, passive, and backward. With this book, Cynthia Van Zandt takes her place in a long line of historians who have labored to overturn that mythology by showing just how precarious early colonial ventures were. * Timothy J. Shannon, Virginia Magazine of History & Biography *

About Cynthia Van Zandt (Associate Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, University of New Hampshire, USA)

Assistant Professor of History, University of New Hampshire

Table of Contents

Prologue ; Introduction ; 1. Mapping the Peoples of the World: Geography, Chorography, and Intercultural Alliances ; 2. Laying the Groundwork for Alliances: Language, Maps, and Intercultural Suspicion ; 3. You Called Him Father: Fictive Kinship and Tributary Alliances in Tsennacomacah/Virginia ; 4. Alliance-Making and the Struggle for the Soul of Plymouth Colony ; 5. Captain Claiborne's Alliance ; 6. Alliances of Necessity: Fictive Kinship and Manhattan's Diaspora African Community ; 7. Nations Intertwined: Alliances and the Susquehannocks' Geography of North America ; Epilogue: Captain Claiborne's Lost Isle ; Notes ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780195181241
9780195181241
0195181247
Brothers Among Nations: The Pursuit of Intercultural Alliances in Early America, 1580-1660 by Cynthia Van Zandt (Associate Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, University of New Hampshire, USA)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2008-07-03
264
N/A
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