Hard Neighbors: The Scotch-Irish Invasion of Native America and the Making of an American Identity
Autor Colin G. Callowayen Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 mar 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197618394
ISBN-10: 0197618391
Pagini: 528
Ilustrații: 29
Dimensiuni: 177 x 229 x 37 mm
Greutate: 0.91 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197618391
Pagini: 528
Ilustrații: 29
Dimensiuni: 177 x 229 x 37 mm
Greutate: 0.91 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
"Hard Neighbors is a scholarly book, well researched, deeply documented, and set in the colonial and early American past. The author's explicit aim - which he achieves admirably - is to detail the complexity of relations between Native Americans and the Scotch-Irish, and break down monolithic notions of white colonists and European settlers."
Colin Calloway seeks neither to celebrate nor to condemn the Scotch-Irish, but to understand them. Using all the skills of a gifted historian, he succeeds admirably in this task. Renowned for his work on Native Americans, he now offers a vivid, judicious, and insightful account of their antagonists-an elusive group of settler colonists who carved out a new American identity through violence.
In this vivid and trenchant book, Colin Calloway deftly reveals violent frontiers of expanding settlements and persistent Native resistance. Transcending conventional profiling of the Scotch-Irish frontier folk as uniquely combative, Calloway uncovers the broad popularity of their sense of grievance towards imperial or national governments. In their disdain for elites as well as another race, the Scotch Irish literally pioneered an American nexus of assertion and complaint that endures to sway millions of voters.
Arguing that what happened on the frontier was as significant to the foundational myth of American democracy as what happened in Philadelphia, Colin Calloway reveals how the Scotch Irish defined that myth, one born of conflict with Indigenous peoples in an ever-receding West and with the expansionism of an imperial East. Anyone who wants to follow the national narrative unspooling under these contending forces over three centuries should read this monumental and masterful account of the American past.
Colin Calloway seeks neither to celebrate nor to condemn the Scotch-Irish, but to understand them. Using all the skills of a gifted historian, he succeeds admirably in this task. Renowned for his work on Native Americans, he now offers a vivid, judicious, and insightful account of their antagonists-an elusive group of settler colonists who carved out a new American identity through violence.
In this vivid and trenchant book, Colin Calloway deftly reveals violent frontiers of expanding settlements and persistent Native resistance. Transcending conventional profiling of the Scotch-Irish frontier folk as uniquely combative, Calloway uncovers the broad popularity of their sense of grievance towards imperial or national governments. In their disdain for elites as well as another race, the Scotch Irish literally pioneered an American nexus of assertion and complaint that endures to sway millions of voters.
Arguing that what happened on the frontier was as significant to the foundational myth of American democracy as what happened in Philadelphia, Colin Calloway reveals how the Scotch Irish defined that myth, one born of conflict with Indigenous peoples in an ever-receding West and with the expansionism of an imperial East. Anyone who wants to follow the national narrative unspooling under these contending forces over three centuries should read this monumental and masterful account of the American past.
Notă biografică
Colin G. Calloway is John Kimball, Jr. 1943 Professor of History and Professor of Native American Studies at Dartmouth College, where he has been a member of the faculty since 1995. He is the author of many books, including The Indian World of George Washington, which won the George Washington Book Prize and was a finalist for the National Book Award.