Restores the historical reality of Native women and is essential to an understanding of North American history
Introduction: “Searching for Cornfields – and Sugar Groves” by
Rebecca Kugel (University of California, Riverside) and Lucy
Eldersveld Murphy (Ohio State University, Newark)
Section I: Theory
What Native Women Were NOT
1. Rayna Green (National Museum of American
History), “The Pocahontas Perplex”
2. David D. Smits (College of New Jersey),
“The ‘Squaw Drudge’: A Prime Index of Savagism,” Excerpt
What Native Women WERE
3. Clara Sue Kidwell (University of
Oklahoma), “Indian Women as Cultural Mediators”
4. Jennifer S. H. Brown (University of
Winnipeg, Manitoba), “Woman as Centre and Symbol in the Emergence
of Métis Communities”
Equality and Feminism
5. Eleanor Leacock (Brooklyn Polytechnic
Institute and City University of New York), “Women’s Status in
Egalitarian Society: Implications for Social Evolution,”
Excerpt
6. Kathryn Shanley (University of Montana),
“Blood Ties and Blasphemy: American Indian Women and the Problem of
History,” Excerpt
Section II: Method
Biography
7. Helen Tanner (Newberry Library,
Chicago), “Coocoochee: Mohawk Medicine Woman”
8. Rebecca Kugel (University of California,
Roverside), “Leadership within the Women’s Community: Susie Bonga
Wright of the Leech Lake Ojibwe”
Central Theme: The Kinship of Religious Affiliation
9. Carl Ekberg (Illinois State University),
with Anton J. Pregaldin, “Marie Rouensa-8canic8e and the
Foundations of French Illinois” 0in 0pt 1.25in; TEXT-INDENT:
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Susan Sleeper-Smith (Michigan State University), “Women, Kin, and
Catholicism: New Perspectives on the Fur Trade”
Central Question: Did Native Women Loose Power After
Colonization?
11. Theda Perdue (University of North Carolina), “Cherokee
Women and the Trail of Tears”
12. Nancy Shoemaker (University of Connecticut), “The Rise or
Fall of Iroquois Women”
Using Gender as a Tool of Analysis: Economics
13. Jean M. O’Brien (University of Minnesota), “Divorced from
the Land: Resistance and Survival of Indian Women in Eighteenth
Century New England”
14. Lucy Eldersveld Murphy (Ohio State University, Newark),
“To Live Among Us: Accommodation, Gender, and Conflict in the
Western Great Lakes Region, 1760-1832”
Oral History
15. Nancy Lurie, ed., Mountain Wolf Woman: Sister of Crashing
Thunder, Excerpts
16. Michelene E. Pesantubbee (University of Iowa), “Beyond
Domesticity: Choctaw Women Negotiating the Tension Between Choctaw
Culture and Protestantism”
Rebecca Kugel is an associate professor of history at the University of California, Riverside. She is the author of To Be the Main Leaders of Our People: A History of Minnesota Ojibwe Politics, 1825–1898. Lucy Eldersveld Murphy is an associate professor of history at Ohio State University, Newark. She is the author of A Gathering of Rivers: Indians, Métis, and Mining in the Western Great Lakes, 1737–1832 (Nebraska 2000). Contributors: Jennifer S. H. Brown, Carl Ekberg, Rayna Green, Clara Sue Kidwell, Rebecca Kugel, Eleanor Leacock, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, Lucy Eldersveld Murphy, Jean M. O’Brien, Theda Perdue, Michelene E. Pesantubbee, Anton J. Pregaldin, Kathryn Shanley, Nancy Shoemaker, Susan Sleeper-Smith, David D. Smits, and Helen Tanner.
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