Major Problems in the History of North American Borderlands
by Hamalainen, Pekka; Johnson, BenjaminBuy New
Buy Used
Rent Textbook
eTextbook
We're Sorry
Not Available
Summary
Table of Contents
| What is Borderlands History? | |
| Essays | |
| A Comparative Approach to Borderlands | |
| From Borderlands to Borders | |
| Telling North American Border Histories | |
| Early Borderlands: The Southwest | |
| Documents | |
| Ginés de Herrera Horta Testifies on Spanish Treatment of Pueblo Indians, 1601 | |
| Pedro Naranjo (Keresan Pueblo) Explains the Pueblo Revolt, 1681 | |
| Bishop Benito Crespo Is Confounded by New Mexico, 1730 | |
| Father Francisco Casanas de Jesús Maria on How to Win the Allegiance of the Caddo Indians, 1691 | |
| Philbert Ory Urges Louisiana to Open Trade with Spaniards in Natchitoches, 1730 | |
| Captain Pierre Marie Francois de Pagès Reports on Texas, 1767 | |
| Essays | |
| Indians and Africans Collaborate in Colonial New Mexico | |
| Captivity, Gender, and Social Control in the Texas-Louisiana Borderlands | |
| Middle Grounds, Borderlands, and Frontiers | |
| Documents | |
| John Smith on the Powhatan Confederacy, 1624 | |
| Chief Powhatan Addresses John Smith, 1609 | |
| Father Jean de Brébeuf Instructs Jesuit Missionaries, 1637 | |
| Mary Jemison Looks Back on Her Capture by and Life Among Indians, 1824 | |
| The South Carolina Government Passes an Act for the Capture of Runaway Slaves, 1700 | |
| William Stephens Assesses the Prospects of Slavery in Georgia, 1742 | |
| Pierre LeMoyne dÆIberville Addresses Chickasaw and Choctaw Leaders, 1702 | |
| Governor Etienne de Périer Considers the Use of Black Slave Troops against Indians, 1730 | |
| Governor Etienne de Périer Appraises French-English-Chickasaw Relations, 1730 | |
| Essays | |
| Indian-English Frontiers of Cooperation and Conquest | |
| French Louisiana in the Native Ground | |
| Borderlands, Cultural Exchanges, and New Native Societies | |
| Documents | |
| Maneo, All-Father Creator, Warns the Cheyennes about Life with Horses | |
| Saukamappee (Cree) Recalls the Arrival of Horses, Guns, and Smallpox to the Northern Plains, 1787 | |
| Marqués de Rubí Recommends the Extermination of the Apaches, 1768 | |
| Charles McKenzie Describes the Horse and Gun Trade on the Northern Plains, 1805 | |
| Rudolph Friedrich Kurz on Gifts, Intermarriage, and the Fur Trade | |
| Francis Chardon Records Relations between Fur Traders and Native Women and a Smallpox Epidemic in the Upper Missouri River, 1836-1839 | |
| Essays | |
| Intermarriage, Borderlands, and Power | |
| Ecological Change and Indigenous Imperialism in the Southwest Borderlands | |
| Borderlands in Change: The View From Above | |
| Documents | |
| Theodore de Croix Compares California to Texas, Coahuila, and New Mexico, 1781 | |
| Governor Alejandro OÆReilly Evaluates LousianaÆs Position in SpainÆs Colonial Economy, 1769 | |
| Bernardo de Gálvez Outlines How to Achieve ôPeace by Deceit,ö 1786 | |
| Pontiac Urges Ottawas, Potawatomis, and Hurons to Rise Up Against the English, 1763 | |
| Governor William Tryon Assesses the Potential of North Carolina Backcountry, 1765 | |
| George Washington Denounces the Royal Proclamation Line, 1767 | |
| Essays | |
| Anglo-America and Its Borderlands | |
| New Spain and Its Borderlands | |
| Borderlands in Change: The View From Below | |
| Documents | |
| Athanese Mézières Courts and Coerces Wichita Chiefs, 1770 | |
| John Sibley and a Comanche Chief Try to Impress One Another, 1807 | |
| Fernando de la Concha Laments the Corrupting Influence of Indians in the New Mexico Borderlands, 1794 | |
| Pedro Bautista Pino Assesses the Condition of New Mexico, 1812 | |
| Joseph Holt Ingraham Observes Indians and Slaves in Natchez, 1835 | |
| The Dohasan Calendar, 1832-1892 | |
| The First Census of Los Angeles, 1781 | |
| Essays | |
| The Frontier Exchange Economy of the Lower Mississippi Valley | |
| Surviving Mission Life in Alta California | |
| The Mexican North | |
| Documents | |
| José María Sánchez Criticizes Tejanos and Anglo-American Immigrants in Texas, 1828 | |
| Tejano Leaders Give Their Opinion of Anglo-American Immigrants, 1832 | |
| Donaciano Vigil Grieves the Changing Relationships among New Mexicans, Anglo-Americans, and Indians, 1846 | |
| Albino Chacón Describes Navajo Raiding and Mounting Discontent in New Mexico, 1837 | |
| New MexicoÆs Chimayó Rebels Denounce Mexico CityÆs Plan for National Reform, 1837 | |
| Manuel Armijo Reports on the Suppression of the Chimayó Rebellion, 1837 | |
| Juan Bandini Envisions an International Future for California, 1830 | |
| Essays | |
| Markets, Persuasion, and Identity in the Southwest Borderlands | |
| Sex, Marriage, and Power in Mexican California | |
| Anglo-American Takeover of the Southwest Borderlands | |
| Documents | |
| Texan Rebels Declare Independence, 1836 | |
| Stephen AustinÆs Map of Empresario Land Grants in Texas, 1835 | |
| Rufus Sage Condemns the Inhabitants of New Mexico, 1846 | |
| Thomas Catesby Jones Announces United States Takeover of California, 1842 | |
| Abraham Lincoln Condemns the War with Mexico, 1848 | |
| The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 1848 | |
| Antonio María Pico and Others Criticize CaliforniaÆs Land Policy, 1859 | |
| Essays | |
| How Stephen F. Austin Became a Rebel | |
| How Indians Shaped the Era of U.S.-Mexican War | |
| Negotiating National Borders | |
| Documents | |
| Escaped Slave Describes Appeal of Canada, 1847 | |
| Frederick Law Olmsted on Slaves Escaping to Mexico, 1857 | |
| Mexican Government Complains of Laborers Flight to the United States, 1873 | |
| U.S. Government Seeks Release from Treaty Obligation to Control Indian Raids into Mexico, 1851 | |
| Sitting Bull Crosses into Canada to Elude U.S. Authorities, 1877 | |
| General Crook Describes Difficulty of Capturing Geronimo, 1883 | |
| Juan Cortina Condemns Anglo-Americans for Land Theft, 1859 | |
| Declaration of the People of RupertÆs Land and the North-West | |
| Essays | |
| Slavery and the Texas-Mexico Border, 1810-1860 | |
| The Border, the Buffalo, and the Métis of Montana | |
| Passages into the Sonora-Arizona Borderlands | |
| Pacific Ties | |
| Documents | |
| The United States Government Passes Chinese Exclusion, 1882 | |
| Sonora Legislature Bans Mexican-Chinese Marriage, 1923 | |
| British Columbia Labor Leader Warns of Dangers of Chinese Migration, 1907 | |
| Journalist Julian Ralph Describes Human Smuggling in the Pacific Northwest, 1891 | |
| Clifford Perkins Describes Work as ôChinese Inspectorö in Arizona, 1978 | |
| Frederick Remington Depicts Suffering of Chinese Migrant, 1891 | |
| Cartoonish Points to Chinese Use of Canadian and Mexican Borders to Enter the United States, 1880 | |
| Essays | |
| The Limits of Early U.S. Border Enforcement | |
| The Impact of Exclusion on the Chinese in America | |
| The Mexican Revolution | |
| Documents | |
| Samuel Bryan Analyzes Increases in Mexican Immigration, 1912 | |
| Flores de Andrade Recalls Her Revolutionary Activity as an Immigrant in El Paso, Texas, 1911 | |
| Mexican Migrant Describes Working Life in the United States, 1927 | |
| South Texas Rebels Issue Manifesto ôThe Plan of San Diego,ö 1915 | |
| President Woodrow Wilson Sends U.S. Army into Mexico, 1916 | |
| Sherriff Justifies Deporting Striking Miners from Arizona Town, 1917 | |
| U.S. Congress Imposes Restrictions on Migration, 1917 | |
| Mexican Migrants Protest Gasoline Baths, 1917 | |
| Essays | |
| MexicoÆs Northern Border and the Coming of the Revolution | |
| The Mexican Revolution and the Birth of the Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement | |
| Vice | |
| Documents | |
| El Paso Reporter Recalls Lure of Juárez in 1920s, 1968 | |
| American Journalist Satirizes American Tourists in Juárez, 1925 | |
| Columnist C.D. Smith Lampoons American Tourists in Search of Drink in Canada, 1925 | |
| Ballad Praises Liquor Smugglers, 1920s | |
| ôContrabando y traiciónö Marks Popularity of Narcocorrido, 1972 | |
| Writer Tom Miller Describes Smuggling Electronics into Mexico to Avoid Duties, 1981 | |
| Former Smuggler Don Henry Ford, Jr. Describes Why Border Community Drawn to Smuggling Marijuana, 2005 | |
| Essays | |
| Canadians, Americans, and the Multiple Meanings of Border during Prohibition | |
| U.S. Prohibition and the Drug Trade in Mexico | |
| Migration, Race, and Border Enforcement | |
| Documents | |
| U.S. Congressman John Box Warns of the Dangers of Mexican Migration, 1928 | |
| Border Patrol Agent Clifford Perkins Recalls Early Challenges of the Organization, 1978 | |
| Philip Stevenson Describes the Deportation of Jesús Pallares, 1936 | |
| Report Examines Migrant Labor in South Texas, 1951 | |
| Bracero and Migrant Manuel Padilla Remembers Working Life in Borderlands, 1974 | |
| President Lyndon Johnson Signs New Immigration Law, 1965 | |
| Leslie Marmon Silko Condemns Border Enforcement from a Native American Perspective, 1994 | |
| Essays | |
| Deportation Policy and the Making and Unmaking of Illegal Aliens | |
| The Crimes and Consequences of Illegal Immigration: A Cross-Border Examination of Operation Wetback, 1943 to 1954 | |
| Economic Integration and Mass Migration, 1994-Present | |
| Documents | |
| U.S. President Bill Clinton Praises Free Trade Agreement, 1993 | |
| Environmental Groups Warn of Damage from NAFTA, 1993 | |
| Mexican President Defends Migrants, 2000 | |
| Minuteman Defense Corps Calls for Volunteer Border Enforcement, 2005 | |
| Reporter Questions Television AnchorÆs Anti-Immigration Crusade, 2007 | |
| Tribal Government Condemns Border Wall, 2008 | |
| Author Describes Death of Migrants in Arizona Desert, 2004 | |
| Journalist Reports on Killing of Women Maquiladora Workers in Juárez, 1997 | |
| Newspaper Describes Increasing Violence of Drug Trade, 2010 | |
| Essays | |
| Canada-U.S. Relations and the Impermeable Border Post 9/11: The Co-Management of North America | |
| The Stranger or the Prodigal Son? | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.
This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.
By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.
A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.
Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.
Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.
