Shock of Colonialism in New England

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1600s
A01=Meghan C. L. Howey
AbenakiPenacook peoples
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ceramics
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Eastern Algonquian languages
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780817361853
  • Weight: 313g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Feb 2025
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Explores the untold impacts of colonialism in New England through diverse colonist lives, Indigenous encounters, and environmental legacies.

In The Shock of Colonialism in New England, archaeologist Meghan C. L. Howey uses excavations in the seventeenth-century colonial frontier of the Great Bay Estuary/P8bagok in today's New Hampshire to trace the connection between European global colonialism and the planetary climate crises. Howey shows how this landscape holds forgotten stories of what it meant to live through the shock of colonialism.

These stories reveal an unexpected diversity and dynamism among English colonists, multifaceted encounters with Indigenous peoples, and lasting environmental damage from labor-intensive industries. Early Euro-American maps and stunning archaeological finds, such as a broken pickaxe embedded in a hearth, and a historical marker for the Oyster River "Massacre" of 1694 complicate our limited views of a shared past.

The reality of English colonialism in the dispossession of Indigenous lands and its wake is not commemorated. Howey's work is a powerful corrective that traces the rise of intergenerational colonial wealth made possible by land commodified as property, the increased labor required to work newly opened land, the importation of indentured Scots and enslaved Africans to provide that labor, and the resulting degradation of the natural environment. Through Howey's insights into the stories they tell, these fragments from a frontier can help contemporary readers better understand the past as they seek a more just and sustainable future.

Meghan C. L. Howey is professor of anthropology and director of the Center for Humanities at the University of New Hampshire. She is the author of Mound Builders and Monument Makers of the Northern Great Lakes, 1200–1600.

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