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Gregory Evans Dowd is a professor of history and American culture and the director of Native American Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Omfatter også følgende navne: Gregory Evans Dowd, Professor Gregory Evans Dowd

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For the author, "rumor" represents a very specific phenomena, in that it is essentially an effort to interrogate potential threats or, occasionally, opportunities, when lacking reliable information. As there was no shortage of actual menaces for Indians and colonists alike. Dowd concentrates on such things as the hunt for gold in the Appalachians (handed down from the Spanish), Indian concerns about whether disease was a weapon wielded by the European explorers and colonists (though there is only one documented case of this being tried (British officers at Fort Pitt in 1763)), and the very real fear of the Indians of being enslaved. The culmination of all this is Indian removal during the Jackson Administration, as all these threats came together in reality with the discovery of actual gold in Georgia. Also woven through this book is Dowd's consideration of how rumor becomes legend and goes on to influence the historiography; as always, everyone gets their own story but the facts are usually harder to tease out.… (mere)
 
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Shrike58 | Mar 20, 2020 |
Dowd digs in to a somewhat unfamiliar topic: native American spiritualism. It was part aspiration and part salvation. It was the nativistic mindset of some Indian leaders -- spanning the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico -- who sought pan-Indian resistance to the accelerating dominance of European and, ultimately, American settlers in their shared "new world." During the latter half of the 18th century and up to 1815, many Indian prophets shared and mutually reinforced a vision of re-energized Indian respect -- in part atavistic, in part adaptive and flexible -- for their traditional values, cultural frames of reference and distinct Indian understanding of their place and relationships with the animal and physical environments they lived in.
This spirituality was sensibly aligned with political, economic and military concerns. A paramount demand and goal was the elimination of both European land acquisition and European intrusion into the public and private lives of Indians.
The "spirited resistance" waxed and waned in the context of widespread internal opposition from "neutral" or "accommodationist" Indian leaders, who sought to maintain useful relationships with the Europeans and also sought to minimize the unavoidable negative aspects of those relationships.
Dowd makes it clear that all the warfare, in-fighting, diplomatic intrigue and contentious disputes about authority and leadership were not simply the usual wrangling of powerful people and groups trying to deal with change they could not completely control.
"A Spirited Resistance" is an account of prescient and proud Indians who thought they saw an opportunity and a path to escape the European-American dominance that was smothering their cherished way of life.
A couple notes:
With trivial exceptions, Dowd does not indicate that Indian women played any public or substantial role in the nativist resistance. This is a puzzling void, given the matrilineal kinship bonds of many Indian nations and the potent roles of women in tribal decision-making and warfare.
The motivations of the accommodationist Indian leaders are not described in any completely satisfying way. Were they less aware or less convinced that European-American dominance was accelerating? Were they simply less willing to act to forestall it?
… (mere)
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rsubber | 1 anden anmeldelse | Nov 2, 2012 |
This is one of a number of path-breaking histories published in the late 1980s and early 1990s that helped reshape perceptions about the North American Indian past. Using an approach similar to Richard White's contemporaneous work, “The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815”, Dowd's book is not a narrative history, but rather an ethnographically-based interpretation of a transformative period. Between the end of the American Revolution and the War of 1812, Indians and Americans struggled over possession of what Dowd calls the Eastern Woodlands, the vast territory stretching east-west from the Appalachians to the Mississippi and north-south from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico. American victory in the Revolution and the subsequent slow withdrawal of British power turned the trickle of American pioneers into a flood by the 1790s, presenting Indians with ever-escalating demands to give up their lands to white settlers. Increasingly outnumbered by whites in the region (a more than seven-to-one advantage by 1815) and unable to obtain arms and supplies from Britain and Spain (both preoccupied with the Napoleonic wars in Europe), Indian resistance eventually dwindled and, as Dowd puts it, the surviving trans-Appalachian Indians became trans-Mississippi Indians, pushed out of their homelands in the tragic process known as “removal” (including the Cherokees' “Trail of Tears” in the 1830s).

Dowd's focus is on the ways in which Indians throughout the region sought to strengthen resistance through unity, a unity based in most instances on a common religious vision. He traces the significance and influence of Indian prophets – from the Delaware Prophet, Neolin, in the 1760s (who inspired Pontiac) to the Shawnee Prophet, Tenskwatawa, in the 1810s (brother of Tecumseh) – in casting whites as children of a different god whose culture and material life posed an existential threat to the Indian world. This wasn't a new idea but drew on traditional religious views that struck a chord as Indian homelands came under pressure. Nor was this response to the white threat universally embraced – much of Dowd's analysis focuses on the swings, over time, in the degree of cooperation and conflict between those he calls accomodationists (who advocated cooperation with whites, though not submission) and nativists (who used religious notions to promote an ideological basis for resistance to white encroachment). Dowd demonstrates that the failure to create a unified resistance had virtually nothing to do with “tribal” differences – Tecumseh, for example, was actively supported by Indians from throughout the Old Northwest as well as Creeks, Cherokees and others from the southeast – but instead reflected the sharp, sometimes violent, divide that developed between nativists and accommodationists in the face of increasingly overwhelming American military and economic power.

Dowd writes in a clear, straightforward style and he's quite effective in drawing from the records of the time to make his case and back up his assertions. As noted, this is not narrative history. The story line is necessarily disjointed, as Dowd jumps back and forth in time and between regions to illustrate his conceptual constructs. The major divide in the work is between developments in the Old Northwest (i.e., north of the Ohio River) and in the southeast (Cherokees, Creeks, Seminoles, Choctaws), though he demonstrates quite clearly how much interaction there was (personal, material, and spiritual) between these regions. All that said, I think any reader with a general knowledge of the main historical trends in the early republic up to 1815 will find this book easy to follow, perhaps even as fascinating as I did, and will be rewarded with new insights about the “settling” of the trans-Appalachian West.
… (mere)
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Markeret
walbat | 1 anden anmeldelse | Dec 31, 2009 |

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