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Cultivating a Landscape of Peace: Iroquois-European Encounters in Seventeenth-Century America (Cornell Paperbacks) Paperback - 1995
by Dennis, Matthew
- Used
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Details
- Title Cultivating a Landscape of Peace: Iroquois-European Encounters in Seventeenth-Century America (Cornell Paperbacks)
- Author Dennis, Matthew
- Binding Paperback
- Edition 3RD
- Condition UsedAcceptable
- Pages 336
- Volumes 1
- Language ENG
- Publisher Cornell University Press, ITHACA, NY
- Date 1995-11-09
- Bookseller's Inventory # 31URM800BDM1_ns
- ISBN 9780801483011 / 0801483018
- Weight 0.94 lbs (0.43 kg)
- Dimensions 9.03 x 6.09 x 0.74 in (22.94 x 15.47 x 1.88 cm)
-
Themes
- Ethnic Orientation: Native American
- Dewey Decimal Code 974.7
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First line
Iroquoia did not yet exist as the second millennium dawned in that area of America north of the Allegheny Mountains, west of the Hudson River Valley, and extending to the Great Lakes Erie and Ontario.
From the rear cover
This book examines the peculiar new worlds of the Five Nations of the Iroquois, the Dutch, and the French, who shared cultural frontiers in seventeenth century North America. Matthew Dennis employs methods and materials from a range of disciplines, including archaeology, ethnology, folklore, literary criticism, and history, to reconstruct those worlds and analyze the consequences of their mingling with one another. Dennis likens his book to a cubist painting that describes and orders multiple elements on canvas but consciously avoids dissolving them into a single angle of vision. Viewing early America from the different perspectives of the diverse people who coexisted uneasily during the colonial encounter between Europeans and Indians, he explains a long-standing paradox: the apparent belligerence of the Five Nations, a people who saw themselves as promoters of universal peace. In a radically new interpretation of the Iroquois, Dennis argues that the Five Nations sought to incorporate their new European neighbors as kinspeople into their Longhouse, the physical and symbolic embodiment of Iroquois domesticity and peace. He offers a close, original reading of the fundamental political myth of the Five Nations, the Deganawidah Epic and situates it historically and ideologically in Iroquois life. Detailing the particular nature of Iroquois peace, he describes the Five Nations' diligent efforts to establish peace on their own terms and the frustrations and hostilities that stemmed from the fundamental contrast between Iroquois and European goals, expectations, and perceptions of human relationships.