Seeing Red


Indigenous Land, American Expansion, and the Political Economy of Plunder in North America

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By Michael John Witgen
Imprint:
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
235 x 155 mm
Weight:
690 g
Pages:
384

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Description

Michael John Witgen (Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe) is professor in the Department of History and the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at Columbia University.

A critical story of survivance. . . . This book joins a growing body of literature by Indigenous scholars and others working to rightly account for the Indigenous history of North America."--Early American Literature A searing account. . . . [Witgen's] incisive and deeply researched study lays bare the mechanisms of this historical land grab."--Publishers Weekly An important analysis of Indigenous resistance to U.S. colonialism in the lands that would become Michigan and Wisconsin during the first half of the nineteenth century."--Civil War Book Review An important work that draws together multiple threads that have all too often remained stubbornly disparate in the field of early American history. Witgen's "political economy of plunder" model achieves something simultaneously noteworthy and quite difficult. . . . Witgen makes the unthinkable imaginable, and even tangible, to his audience."--H-Early-America

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