Indigenous Kinship, Colonial Texts, and the Contested Space of Early New Englan…
Indigenous Kinship, Colonial Texts, and the Contested Space of Early New EnglandAuthor(s): Marie Balsley Taylor\nFormat: Hardback\nPublisher: University of Massachusetts Press, United States\nImprint: University of Massachusetts Press\nISBN-13: 9781625347268, 978-1625347268\nSynopsis\nNew England history often treats Indigenous people as minor or secondary actors within the larger colonial story. Focusing on those Native Americans who were sachems, or leaders, in local tribes when Europeans began arriving, Marie Balsley Taylor reframes stories of Indigenous and British interactions and illuminates the vital role that Indigenous kinship and diplomacy played in shaping the textual production of English colonial settlers in New England from the 1630s until King Philips War.\n\nTaylor argues that genres like the conversion narrative, the post-sermon question and answer session, and scientific treatisedespite being written in English for European audienceswere jointly created by Indigenou.
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