Creating New England, Defending the Northeast: Contested Algonquian and English Spatial Worlds, 1500–1700: Native Americans of the Northeast
Autor Nathan Braccioen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 feb 2026
Between 1500 and 1700, Indigenous and English mapmakers across the North Atlantic depicted present-day New England in markedly distinct ways, highlighting how differently their communities understood the landscape. While English cartographers relied on new mathematics and other developing scientific knowledge from Europe, as well as an overhead perspective of the world, Algonquian mapmakers drew on deep knowledge of the landscape, derived from their communities’ long history upon it. Nathan Braccio refers to this phenomenon as “parallel landscapes.”
Creating New England, Defending the Northeast asserts that Algonquian knowledge of the landscape represented a powerful and persistent alternative to English surveying and mapmaking in the Northeast. When English colonists and explorers recognized the unsuitability of their techniques for understanding New England’s unfamiliar landscape, they attempted to appropriate Indigenous knowledge and maps. Algonquian sachems used this as an opportunity to control and benefit from their new English neighbors. Later, as the English became insecure in their dependence on Indigenous people, they began to remake and mark the landscape. Algonquians adapted, maintaining control of important spatial knowledge, even in a place no longer entirely of their making. This story complicates narratives of conquest and highlights the Indigenous spatial knowledge too often overlooked.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781625349132
ISBN-10: 1625349130
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 16 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria Native Americans of the Northeast
ISBN-10: 1625349130
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 16 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria Native Americans of the Northeast
Notă biografică
NATHAN BRACCIO is assistant professor of History at Clark University. His writing has appeared in the Journal of Early American Studies and the Historical Journal of Massachusetts.
Recenzii
"Creating New England, Defending the Northeast is exceedingly well-researched, and the nuance is brought in through the use of multiple case studies that build up the complicated, cooperative, and conflicting moments that contribute to the ways in which English and Algonquian people identified themselves both in relationship to the lands around them and to one another."—Marie Balsley Taylor, author of Indigenous Kinship, Colonial Texts, and the Contested Space of Early New England
“This innovative and impressive new book, a welcome addition to the understanding of spatial culture of Indigenous New England, advances its arguments using rare primary sources, especially map manuscripts that include characteristics of Algonquian views of their homeland. This is not a story of decline, but how the Massachusetts, Narragansetts, Wampanoags, and neighboring tribes continued to make southern New England home, despite the overwhelming odds against them. Braccio shows how Native people strove to protect their rights to the land in a changing world.”—Micah Pawling, author of Wabanaki Homeland and the New State of Maine: The 1820 Journal and Plans of Survey of Joseph Treat
“This innovative and impressive new book, a welcome addition to the understanding of spatial culture of Indigenous New England, advances its arguments using rare primary sources, especially map manuscripts that include characteristics of Algonquian views of their homeland. This is not a story of decline, but how the Massachusetts, Narragansetts, Wampanoags, and neighboring tribes continued to make southern New England home, despite the overwhelming odds against them. Braccio shows how Native people strove to protect their rights to the land in a changing world.”—Micah Pawling, author of Wabanaki Homeland and the New State of Maine: The 1820 Journal and Plans of Survey of Joseph Treat