Review of Daniel R. Mandell's Tribe, Race, History: Native Americans in Southern New England, 1780-1880

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2009
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American English
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MIT Press
Abstract

Virtually every nineteenth-century local history of a New England town begins with a chapter about the last “red man” to have lived there. The tone is generally somber but optimistic—marking the sad but inevitable passing away of a noble race, thus allowing for the rise of true civilization. Scholarship of the last decade or so has been chipping away at this trope, but none has done so as comprehensively as Mandell. Studies of New England Indian history are rich, though heavily weighted to the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In the larger field of Indian history, the Old Northwest garners most attention in the era of the early Republic, before shifting to the Southeast in the era of Removal, and the West in the latter half of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

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Wheeler, R. (2009). Review of Daniel Mandell, Tribe, Race, History: Native Americans in Southern New England, 1780-1880. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 40(1), 113–114.
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The Journal of Interdisciplinary History
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