Michael T. Karp is an assistant professor of history at California State University, San Bernardino.
Description
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Indigenous Workscapes 2. Forced Labor and Livestock 3. Surviving Genocide 4. Redwood Migrations and the Pacific Economy 5. The Redwood Workscape 6. Forging a White Settler Community 7. The Final Purge and a Failed Strike 8. Progressives and Paternalists Unite 9. Cleansing the New Outsiders Conclusion: From Tuluwat to Gunther Island and Back Appendix: Statistics Related to Redwood Production and Consumption Notes Bibliography Index
"Michael Karp expertly blends environmental history, labor history, and the history of race to reveal how diverse peoples' working relationships with the landscapes of California's northwestern redwood country transformed patterns of global economic exchange, migration, class conflict, and intergenerational racial violence. His extensive research and sharp analysis demonstrate that this little-known region, often dismissed as an isolated rural backwater, was essential to the construction of the U.S. settler colonial state and to the expansion of capitalism across the Pacific World."-Stacey L. Smith, author of Freedom's Frontier: California and the Struggle over Unfree Labor, Emancipation, and Reconstruction

