Cherokees

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A01=David Narrett
alexander cameron
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american indian studies
american revolution
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Author_David Narrett
british cherokee war
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cherokee culture
cherokee lands
cherokee nation
cherokee studies
cherokee women
cherokee-creek
chickamaugas
chickasaw
chickasaws
colin calloway new worlds for all
colonial america
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cultural adaptation
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diplomatic relations
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ethnohistory
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frontier history
frontier south
hopewell treaty
indian removal
indigenous diplomacy
indigenous governance
indigenous history
indigenous peoples
indigenous politics
indigenous resistance
intercultural exchange
intertribal warfare
james merrell into the american woods
michael green the politics of indian removal
muscogee
nan--ye-hi
nancy ward
native american diplomacy
native american history
native american politics
native american society
native american warfare
native diplomacy
ned blackhawk violence over the land
peace negotiations
settler colonialism
shawnees
skiagusta
southeastern tribes
theda perdue cherokee women
trail of tears
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tribal diplomacy
tribal leadership
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u.s. expansion
william bull
william henry lyttelton
women diplomats

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674258204
  • Weight: 1092g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A sweeping new history reveals how the Cherokees became a nation as they navigated a century and a half of intertribal conflicts and colonial expansion that threatened their way of life.

For more than 150 years between their first encounters with the English in the 1670s and forced removal along the Trail of Tears, the Cherokees negotiated mounting pressures. As their world was convulsed by the spread of European diseases, competition for guns, furs, and deerskins, and imperial powers’ unrelenting pursuit of “savage” allies, Cherokee communities responded by creating new solidarities. At the dawn of the eighteenth century, the idea of unity among the widely dispersed Cherokees would scarcely have occurred to their leaders. A century later, chiefs would declare unequivocally that they stood for the whole Cherokee nation.

Steps toward national unity were partially a response to the exigencies of war. But while armed conflict was frequent, David Narrett shows that the bonds of Cherokee peoplehood were forged primarily through efforts to maintain peace and secure their livelihoods. The Cherokees—both men and women—were remarkably skillful diplomats who practiced peacemaking as a distinctive spiritual art in which adversaries would reconcile through a mutual and symbolic forgetting of wrongs inflicted on one another. Pragmatic and purposeful, Cherokees adeptly managed relationships with colonials and Indigenous rivals, seeking to preserve their independence and living space and to maximize advantages from trade.

Rich in detail and insight, and told through captivating personal stories, The Cherokees offers a portrait of the perseverance that built a nation. Amid an onslaught of struggle and change, the Cherokees became a people who survived against all odds.

David Narrett is the author of Adventurism and Empire: The Struggle for Mastery in the Louisiana-Florida Borderlands and Inheritance and Family Life in Colonial New York City. He is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Texas at Arlington.

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