Kinsmen of Another Kind - Anderson Gary C.
Kinsmen of Another Kind - Anderson Gary C.
- Dakota-White Relations in the Upper Mississippi Valley, 1650-1862
AutorzyAnderson Gary C.
In Kinsmen of Another Kind, Anderson shows how the Dakota concept of kinship affected the tribe's complex relationships with the whites. The Dakota were obligated to help their relatives by any means possible. Traders who were adopted or who married into the tribe gained from this relationship—but had reciprocal responsibilities. After the 1820s, the trade in furs declined, more whites moved into the territory, and the Dakota became more economically dependent on the whites. When American traders and officials failed to fulfill their obligations, many Dakotas finally saw the whites as enemies to be driven from Minnesota.
This reprint edition of Anderson's work, first published in 1984, provides a new understanding of a complicated period in Minnesota history.
EAN: 9780873513531
Symbol
655GKQ03527KS
Rok wydania
1997
Elementy
416
Oprawa
Miekka
Format
14.0x21.6cm
Język
angielski

Bez ryzyka
14 dni na łatwy zwrot

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Symbol
655GKQ03527KS
Kod producenta
9780873513531
Rok wydania
1997
Elementy
416
Oprawa
Miekka
Format
14.0x21.6cm
Język
angielski
Autorzy
Anderson Gary C.

In August 1862 the Dakota or Eastern Sioux, frustrated at being defrauded by the United States government and at losing their land and livelihood, resorted to armed conflict against the white settlers of southern Minnesota. Gary Clayton Anderson is the first historian to use an ethnohistorical approach to explain why, after more than two centuries of friendly interaction, the bonds of peace between the Dakota and whites suddenly broke apart.
In Kinsmen of Another Kind, Anderson shows how the Dakota concept of kinship affected the tribe's complex relationships with the whites. The Dakota were obligated to help their relatives by any means possible. Traders who were adopted or who married into the tribe gained from this relationship—but had reciprocal responsibilities. After the 1820s, the trade in furs declined, more whites moved into the territory, and the Dakota became more economically dependent on the whites. When American traders and officials failed to fulfill their obligations, many Dakotas finally saw the whites as enemies to be driven from Minnesota.
This reprint edition of Anderson's work, first published in 1984, provides a new understanding of a complicated period in Minnesota history.
EAN: 9780873513531
In Kinsmen of Another Kind, Anderson shows how the Dakota concept of kinship affected the tribe's complex relationships with the whites. The Dakota were obligated to help their relatives by any means possible. Traders who were adopted or who married into the tribe gained from this relationship—but had reciprocal responsibilities. After the 1820s, the trade in furs declined, more whites moved into the territory, and the Dakota became more economically dependent on the whites. When American traders and officials failed to fulfill their obligations, many Dakotas finally saw the whites as enemies to be driven from Minnesota.
This reprint edition of Anderson's work, first published in 1984, provides a new understanding of a complicated period in Minnesota history.
EAN: 9780873513531
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