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Demanding The Cherokee Nation Indian Autonomy And American Culture 18301900 Indians Of The Southeast Andrew Denson

  • SKU: BELL-2197440
Demanding The Cherokee Nation Indian Autonomy And American Culture 18301900 Indians Of The Southeast Andrew Denson
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Demanding The Cherokee Nation Indian Autonomy And American Culture 18301900 Indians Of The Southeast Andrew Denson instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.4 MB
Pages: 344
Author: Andrew Denson
ISBN: 0803217269, 9780803217263
Language: English
Year: 2004

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Demanding The Cherokee Nation Indian Autonomy And American Culture 18301900 Indians Of The Southeast Andrew Denson by Andrew Denson 0803217269, 9780803217263 instant download after payment.

Demanding the Cherokee Nation examines nineteenth-century Cherokee political rhetoric to address an enigma in American Indian history: the contradiction between the sovereignty of Indian nations and the political weakness of Indian communities. Making use of a rich collection of petitions, appeals, newspaper editorials, and other public records, Andrew Denson describes the ways in which Cherokees represented their people and their nation to non-Indians after their forced removal to Indian Territory in the 1830s. He argues that Cherokee writings on nationhood document a decades-long effort by tribal leaders to find a new model for American Indian relations in which Indian nations could coexist with a modernizing United States.Most non-Natives in the nineteenth century assumed that American development and progress necessitated the end of tribal autonomy, that at best the Indian nation was a transitional state for Native people on the way to assimilation. As Denson shows, however, Cherokee leaders found a variety of ways in which the Indian nation, as they defined it, belonged in the modern world. Tribal leaders responded to developments in the United States and adapted their defense of Indian autonomy to the great changes transforming American life in the middle and late nineteenth century. In particular, Cherokees in several ways found new justification for Indian nationhood in American industrialization.

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