What You Need to Read, March 2019

Adams, James David, Jr., Troy Phipps, “Los Angeles Area Indian Land Ownership After the Civil War,” Journal of the West, 57 (Spring 2018) 7-13.

Andersson, Rani-Henrik and Raymond J. DeMallie, A Whirlwind Passed Through Our Country: Lakota Voices of the Ghost Dance, (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2018)

Beck, Robin. Chiefdoms, Collapse, and Coalescence in the Early American South, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018).

Beyreis, David. “The Chaos of Conquest: The Bents and the Problem of American Expansion, 1846-1849,” Kansas History,  41 (Summer 2018), 74-89.

Bruchac, Margaret M. “Broken Chains of Custody: Possessing, Dispossessing, and Repossessing Lost Wampum Belts,” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 163 (March 2018), 56-105.

Buchkoski, John J. “’Being Judged by its Fruits’: Transforming Indian Lands into Orchards along the Arkansas River, 1800-1867,” Great Plains Quarterly, 39 (Winter 2019), 39-58.

Burns, Michael “The Civil War on the Northern Plains: John Pope’s Military Policies against the Sioux in the Department of the Northwest, 1862-1865,” Great Plains Quarterly, 38 (Winter 2018), 77-103.

 Georgia Press, 2018).

Catalano, Joshua Casmir. “Blue Jacket, Anthony Wayne, and the Psychological and Symbolic War for Ohio, 1790-1795,” Ohio History, 126 (Spring 2019), 5-34.

Cipolla, Craig N., James Quinn, and Jay Levy. “Theory in Collaborative Indigenous Archaeology: Insights from Mohegan,” American Antiquity, 84 (January 2019), 127-142.

Donis, Jay. “No Man Shall Suffer for the Murder of a Savage: The Augusta Boys and the Virginia and Pennsylvania Frontiers,” Pennsylvania History,86 (Winter 2019), 38-66.

Dubcovsky, Alejandra. Informed Power: Communication in the Early American South, (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2016).

Estes, Nick and Jaskiran Dhillon, eds., Standing with Standing Rock: Voices from the #NoDAPL Movement, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2019).

Fowles, Severin, et. al., “Comanche New Mexico: The Eighteenth Century,” in New Mexico and the Pimeria Alta: The Colonial Period in the American Southwest, ed. John G. Douglass and William M. Graves, (Boulder: University of Colorado Press, 2017)

Garret-Davis, Josh. “The Intertribal Drum of Radio: The Indians for Indians Hour and Native American Media, 1941-1951,” Western Historical Quarterly, 49 (Autumn 2018) 249-273.

Gillreath-Brown, Andrew and Tanya M. Peres, “Identifying Turtle Shell Rattles in the Archaeological Record of the Southeastern United States,” Ethnobiology Letters, 8 (no. 1, 2017), 109-114

Grillot, Thomas. “The Point of View of a Stone: Looking at the Colonization of the Northern Plains from the Standing Rock,” Ethnohistory, 66 (January 2019), 49-70

Hansen, Karen V., Grey Osterud, and Valerie Grim, “Land Was One of the Greatest Gifts: Womens Land Ownership in Dakota Indian, Immigrant Scandinavian, and African American Communities,” Great Plains Quarterly, 38 (Summer 2018), 251-272.

Handsman, Russel G. “Survivance Strategies and the Materialities of Mashantucket Pequot Labor in the Later Eighteenth Century,” Historical Archaeology, 52 (March 2018), 51-69.

Harper, Rob. Unsettling the West: Violence and State Building in the Ohio Valley, (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018).

Hart, Siobhan and Paul A. Shackel, Colonialism, Community and Heritage in Native New England, (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2019).

Hauptman, Laurence M. Coming Full Circle: The Seneca Nation of Indians, 1848-1934, (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2019).

Henry, Robert, et. al., eds. Global Indigenous Health: Reconciling the Past, Engaging the Present, Animating the Future. (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2018).

Hodge, Adam R. Ecology and Ethnogenesis: An Environmental History of the Wind River Shoshones, 1000-1868, (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2019).

Kelderman, Frank. “Rock Island Revisited: Black Hawk’s Life, Keokuk’s Oratory, and the Critique of US Indian Policy,” The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists, 6 (Spring 2018), 67-92.

Keyser, James D. “Cheval Bonnet: A Crow Calling Card in the Blackfeet Homeland,” Ethnohistory, 65 (January 2018) 129-155.

Koehler, Rhiannon. “Hostile Nations: Quantifying the Destruction of the Sullivan-Clinton Genocide of 1779,” American Indian Quarterly, 42 (Fall 2018), 427-453.

Kokomoor, Kevin. Of One Mind and of One Government: The Rise and Fall of theh Creek Nation in the Early Republic, (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2019).

Lampitt, Bradley R. “The Civil War and Reconstruction in Indian Territory: Historiography and Prospects for New Directions in Research,” Civil War History, 64 (June 2018), 121-145.

Landrum, Cynthia Leanne. The Dakota Experience at Flandreau and Pipestsone Indian Schools, (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2019).

McNeil, Kent. “Louisiana Purchase: Indian and American Sovereignty in the Missouri Watershed,” Western Historical Quarterly, 50 (Spring 2019). 17-42.

Madley, Benjamin. “California’s First Mass Incarceration System: Franciscan Missions, California Indians, and Penal Servitude, 1769-1836,” Pacific Historical Review, 88 (Winter 2019), 14-47.

Miller, Douglas K. Indians on the Move: Native American Mobility and Urbanization in the Twentieth Century, (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2019).

Nielsen, Marianne O.  and Karen Jarratt-Snider, Crime and Social Justice in Indian Country, (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2018)

Osburn, Katherine M. B., “Strategic Citizenship: Negotiating Public Law 280 in Arizona, 1953-1968,” Ethnohistory, 66 (June 2019), 1-20.

Ostler, Jeffrey. Surviving Genocide: Native Nations and the United States from the American Revolution to Bleeding Kansas, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2019).

Pawling, Micah A. “A ‘Labyrinth of Uncertainties’: Penobscot River Islands, Land Assignments, and Indigenous Women Proprietors in Nineteenth Century Maine,” American Indian Quarterly, 42 (Fall 2018), 454-487.

Pexa, Christopher J. Translated Nation: Rewriting the Dakhota Oyate, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2019).

Rindfleisch, Bryan. “The Indian Factors: Kinship, Trade, and Authority in the Creek Nation and American South, 1740-1800,” Journal of Early American History, 8 (2018), 1-29.

________. “’We Are Now, As We Have Always Been, A Free and Independent People’: The Familial and Interpersonal Dimensions of Creek Indian Sovereignty, 1783-1800,” New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century, 15 (Spring 2018), 33-53.

Rivas, Brenna Gardner. “An Unequal Right to Bear Arms: State Weapons Laws and White Supremacy in Texas, 1836-1900,” Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 121 (January 2018), 285-303.

Robbins, Sarah Ruffing.  “Reclaiming Voices from Indian Boarding School Narratives,” in Reclaiming Voices from Indian Boarding School Narratives, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2017), 135-179.

Sedgwick, John. Blood Moon: Am American Epic of War and Splendor in the Cherokee Nation, (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2018).

Shreve, Bradley G. “From Gallup to Grandiosity and Back Again: The National Indian Youth Council and the Roots of Red Power,” New Mexico Historical Review, 93 (Fall 2018), 377-397.

Smithers, Gregory D. Native Southerners: Indigenous History from Origins to Removal, (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2018).

Strong, John A. America’s Early Whalemen: Indian Shore Whalers on Long Island, 1650-1750, (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2018).

Toulouse, Pamela Rose. Truth and Reconciliation in Canadian Schools, (Winnipeg: Portage and Main Press, 2018).

Trafzer, Clifford. Fighting Invisible Enemies: Health and Medical Transitions among Southern California Indians, (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2019).

Treuer, David. The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America from 1890 to the Present, (New York: Riverhead Books, 2019).

Truden, John. “Reexamining Dick Wilson: Oglala Politics, Nation Building, and Local Conflict, 1972-1976,” South Dakota History, 48 (Fall 2018), 173-199.

Van de Logt, Mark. Monsters of Contact: Historical Trauma in Caddoan Oral Traditions, (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2018).

VanWinkle, Tony N. and Jack R. Friedman, “American Indian Landowners, Leasemen, and Bureaucrats: Property, Paper, and the Poli-Technics of Dispossession in Southwestern Oklahoma,” American Indian Quarterly, 42 (Fall 2018), 508-533.

Walkiewicz, Kathryn. “Pressing for Sequoyah: Print Culture and the Indian Territory Statehood Movement,” Journal of Nineteenth Century Americanist, 6 (Fall 2018), 335-364.

Warren, James A. God, War, and Providence: The Epic Struggle of Roger Williams and the Narragansett Indians against the Puritans of New England, (New York: Scribner, 2018).

Waterman, Stephanie J. and Shelly C. Lowe, Beyond Access: Indigenizing Programs for Native American Student Success, (Sterling, VA: Stylus, 2018).

Watson, Samuel. “Military Learning and Adaptation Shaped by Social Context: The U. S. Army and Its ‘Indian Wars,’ 1790-1890,” Journal of Military History, 82 (April 2018) 373-438.

Wilkins, David E. Documents of Native American Political Development: 1933 to the Present, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2019).

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