Firsting and Lasting: Writing Indians out of Existence in New England
By (Author) Jean M. OBrien
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
19th July 2010
United States
General
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Indigenous peoples
974.00497
Paperback
320
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 23mm
Across nineteenth-century New England, antiquarians and community leaders wrote hundreds of local histories about the founding and growth of their cities and towns. Ranging from pamphlets to multivolume treatments, these narratives shared a preoccupation with establishing the region as the cradle of an Anglo-Saxon nation and the center of a modern American culture. They also insisted, often in mournful tones, that New England's original inhabitants, the Indians, had become extinct, even though many Indians still lived in the very towns being chronicled. In Firsting and Lasting, Jean M. O'Brien argues that local histories became a primary means by which European Americans asserted their own modernity while denying it to Indian peoples.
Jean M. OBrien (White Earth Ojibwe) is associate professor of history at the University of Minnesota, where she is also affiliated with American Indian studies and American studies. She is the author of Dispossession by Degrees: Indian Land and Identity in Natick, Massachusetts, 16501790.