Calgary Public Library

Our beloved kin, a new history of King Philip's war, Lisa Brooks

Label
Our beloved kin, a new history of King Philip's war, Lisa Brooks
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 347-424) and index
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Our beloved kin
Responsibility statement
Lisa Brooks
Series statement
The Henry Roe Cloud series on American Indians and modernity
Sub title
a new history of King Philip's war
Table Of Contents
Prologue: Caskoak, the place of peace -- Part I. The education of Weetamoo and James Printer: exchange, diplomacy, dispossession -- Namumpum, "our beloved kinswoman," Saunkskwa of Pocasset: bonds, acts, deeds -- The Harvard Indian College scholars and the Algonquian origins of American literature -- Interlude: Nashaway: Nipmuc country, 1643-1674 -- Part II. No single origin story: multiple views on the emergence of war -- The Queen's right and the Quaker's relation -- Here comes the storm -- The printer's revolt: a narrative of the captivity of James the Printer -- Part III. Colonial containment and networks of kinship: expanding the map of captivity, resistance, and alliance -- The roads leading North: September 1675-January 1676 -- Interlude: "My children are here and I will stay": Menimesit, January 1676 -- The captive's lament: reinterpreting Rowlandson's narrative -- Part IV. The place of peace and the ends of war -- Unbinding the ends of war -- The Northern front: beyond replacement narratives
Content

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