Description
Book SynopsisExamines the shatter zone created in the colonial South through the interactions of American Indians and European colonists. This book assesses the shatter zone region as a whole and the varied ways in which Native peoples wrestled with an increasingly unstable world and worked to re-establish order.
Trade Review"Editors Ethridge and Shuck-Hall have crafted a unique anthology on a little-studied subject: the very specific cause-and-effect relationships of European contact with the Mississippian world of eastern North America."—C. R. Kasee,
Choice"This edited volume combines data from archaeology, anthropology, and history to provide one of the most complete syntheses available of the impact of European colonization on Native people in the American South."—Anthony Michal Krus,
American Antiquity"This is an excellent snapshot of a welcome resurgence in sophisticated research on the pre- and early colonial South."—Lynn A. Nelson,
American Historical Review"How did the complex Mississippian societies of the American South become the decentralized Indian societies of the eighteenth century? This volume's fifteen contributors answer that question anew by employing the concept of a "shatter zone" to identify the causes of instability and map its effects in time and place. Those achievements alone make
Shatter Zone noteworthy."—Steven C. Hahn,
Ethnohistory"Ethridge, through her introduction, has placed this history in dialogue with a diverse scholarship on colonialism both in North American and elsewhere in the early modern world. Perhaps now this pivotal period, no longer forgotten, will instead enjoy the wider scholarly interest that it deserves."—Joseph Hall,
Journal of Southern History"
Mapping the Mississippian Shatter Zone offers one of the most complete syntheses to date about colonization's impact on Southeastern Native societies. . . . The shatter zone approach and the book's multidisciplinary approach and multicausal view will offer scholars a useful guide to studying the transformation of Native worlds well beyond the Southern colonial era."—S. Matthew DeSpain,
Journal of Anthropological ResearchTable of Contents1. Introduction: Mapping the Mississippian Shatter Zone
Robbie Ethridge 2. Events as Seen from the North: The Iroquois and Colonial Slavery
William A. Fox 3. From Refugees to Slave Traders: The Transformation of the Westo Indians
Maureen Meyers 4. "Caryinge awaye their Corne and Children": The Effects of Westo Slave Raids on the Indians of the Lower South
Eric E. Bowne 5. Catawba Coalescence and the Shattering of the Carolina Piedmont, 1540--1675
Robin A. Beck Jr. 6. "Indians Refusing to Carry Burdens": Understanding the Success of Catawba Political, Military, and Settlement Strategies in Colonial Carolina
Mary Elizabeth Fitts and Charles L. Heath 7. "The Greatest Travelers in America": Shawnee Survival in the Shatter Zone
Stephen Warren and Randolph Noe 8. Tracing the Origins of the Early Creeks, 1050--1700 CE
Ned J. Jenkins 9. Alabama and Coushatta Diaspora and Coalescence in the Mississippian Shatter Zone
Sheri M. Shuck-Hall 10. Violence in a Shattered World
Mathew H. Jennings 11. Razing Florida: The Indian Slave Trade and the Devastation of Spanish Florida, 1659--1715
John E. Worth 12. Shattered and Infected: Epidemics and the Origins of the Yamasee War, 1696--1715
Paul Kelton 13. Choctaws at the Border of the "Shatter Zone": Spheres of Exchange and Spheres of Social Value
Patricia Galloway 14. Shatter Zone Shock Waves along the Lower Mississippi
Marvin D. Jeter 15. Picking up the Pieces: Natchez Coalescence in the Shatter Zone
George Edward Milne Afterword: Some Thoughts on Further Work
Robbie EthridgeBibliography List of Contributors Index