Age of the Borderlands

Regular price €36.50
A01=Andrew C. Isenberg
American Colonization Society
Andrew Jackson in Florida
annexation of Texas
Author_Andrew C. Isenberg
Benjamin Lundy
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Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
Category=WQH
Creek Indians
Dakota Indians
Dakota War of 1862
emigration to Haiti
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eq_history
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fort Osage
fugitive slaves in Florida
fur trade in the Great Plains
George Sibley
Gideon Pond
Henry Schoolcraft
James Pattie
John O'Sullivan and manifest destiny
John O’Sullivan and manifest destiny
Lac qui Parle
Lakota Indians
Mary Riggs
Mexican-American War
Minnesota
Missouri
Ojibwe Indians
Osage Indians
Presbyterian missionaries in Minnesota
Samuel Pond
Santa Fe Trail
Seminole Indians in Florida
slavery in Texas
smallpox vaccination
Spanish Florida
Stephen Riggs
Texas Revolution
Thomas Williamson
War of 1812

Product details

  • ISBN 9781469685052
  • Dimensions: 155 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In The Age of the Borderlands, acclaimed historian Andrew C. Isenberg offers a new history of manifest destiny that breaks from triumphalist narratives of US territorial expansion. Isenberg takes readers to the contested borders of Spanish Florida, Missouri, New Mexico, California, Texas, and Minnesota at critical moments in the early to mid-nineteenth century, demonstrating that the architects of American expansion faced significant challenges from the diverse groups of people inhabiting each region. In other words, while the manifest destiny paradigm begins with an assumption of US strength, the government and the agents it dispatched to settle and control the frontier had only a weak presence.

Tracing the interconnected histories of Indians, slaves, antislavery reformers, missionaries, federal agents, and physicians, Isenberg shows that the United States was repeatedly forced to accommodate the presence of other colonial empires and powerful Indigenous societies. Anti-expansionists in the borderlands welcomed the precarity of the government's power: The land on which they dwelled was a grand laboratory where they could experiment with their alternative visions for American society. Examining the borderlands offers an understanding not just about frontier spaces but about the nature of the early American state— ambitiously expansionist but challenged by its native and imperial competitors.
Andrew C. Isenberg is the Hall Distinguished Professor of American History at the University of Kansas.