Laura J. Feller holds a PhD from George Washington University. She is retired as a staff historian in the Washington, D.C., Office of the National Park Service.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
"Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia introduces readers to a host of interesting stories and sources. These, along with Feller's use of in-text questions and suppositions, offer future scholars a great deal to work with as researchers continue to expand our understanding of Virginia's Indigenous peoples."--Journal of American History "Drawing on both archival and published sources, Feller does an excellent job demonstrating the constructed nature of race in Virginia. She empathetically portrays Native Americans' attempt to navigate these complex waters, which at times had them "playing Indian" to appeal to white nostalgia for the state's earliest history, and at others had them rejecting past and present associations with Black Americans. Feller helps non-Indian readers understand the "fluidity, instability, and destructive power of the construction of race in America."-- The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography