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2015
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IN MAYA GUATEMALA
ERNEST L. BLUMENSCHEIN
By Rudolfo Anaya
Carole B. Larson
By Ronald D. Parks
OUPRESS.COM OUPRESSBLOG.COM
OUPRESS.COM 800-627-7377
FEBRUARY
$29.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-4668-3
432 PAGES, 6 9
23 B&W ILLUS., 3 MAPS, 2 TABLES
RELIGION/HISTORY
Of Related Interest
COLOR A DO
A H I S T O R I C A L AT L A S
By Thomas J. Noel
Cartography by Carol Zuber-Mallison
Thomas J. Noel is Professor of History and Director of Public History, Preservation, and Colorado
Studies at University of Colorado Denver. He appears regularly on Denvers Channel 9 (NBC) as
Dr. Colorado, writes a Sunday Denver Post column, and is the author or coauthor of more than 42
books, including Colorado: A History of the Centennial State (coauthored with Carl Abbott and Steve
Leonard) and Colorado: A Liquid History and Tavern Guide to the Highest State.
Carol Zuber-Mallison is an award-winning freelance artist specializing in maps and informational
graphics. For 14 years she was an editor and artist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and the Dallas
Morning News. She also created maps and graphics for the Texas Almanac and Texas: A Historical Atlas.
Of Related Interest
COLORADO
GHOST TOWNS AND
MINING CAMPS
By Sandra Dallas
$26.95 Paper
978-0-8061-2084-3
FOLLOWING ISABELLA
Travels in Colorado
Then and Now
By Robert Root
$19.95 Paper
978-0-8061-4018-6
Maximum Temperature
109
108
Craig
Stea
Sp
Meeker
Glenwood
Springs
Grand Junction
Montrose
Gunniso
Lake City
Durango
OUPRESS.COM 800-627-7377
36
28
St
na
BOULDER
40
ay
dw
oa
Br
Hewlett Packard
Carefree of Colorado
Kindel Bedding
Eaton Metals
Wright & McGill
34
Sandoz
Crocs
IBM
Hot Sulphur
Springs
40
Baseline
Golden
Colorado
Springs
Glenwood
Springs
on
24
Leadville
Aspen
Samsonite
Rocky Mountain Arsenal
39
Boeing
Aurora
Frederic Printing
Raytheon (formerly Stearns-Roger)
Jeppesen Aviation
70
Hughes Aircraft
Overland
Cotton
Hewlett-Packard
Oracle Corporation
24
Divide
25
Immos Circuits
Salida
Trinidad
Continental Divide
95 to 100
90 to 95
50
Westcliffe
Convergys
Kaman Aerospace
Nevada
Pueblo
Colorado Fuel
and Iron
(Evraz Pueblo)
Ordway
50
285
Telluride
La
Junta
25
Creede
Silverton
39
24
Ampex
37
Saguache
Lake City
Platte
Caon
City
Cotter
285
550
85 to 90
Stresscon
Corporation
Springfield
COLORADO
287
SPRINGS
87
85
Schlage
Honeywell
Ouray
385
24
38
Cripple Creek
Gunnison
s Fahrenheit
80 to 85
Evans
Western Forge
Lamar
Alamosa
50
MAY
$39.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-4184-8
368 PAGES, 12 9.5
112 COLOR MAPS, 109 COLOR ILLUS., 7 CHARTS, 1 TABLE
U.S. HISTORY/REFERENCE
40
85
Springs
Montrose
6
DENVER
Glendale
Fairplay
285
24
Delta
Pueblo
tar Aviation
rostline
alliburton Energy
ee
Gates Corp.34
Mississippi
Brighton
Storage Tek
Ball Canning
Rocky Flats
36
Sp
25
Alameda
Greeley
34
41
287
Rocky Denver Post
Mountain
Sports Authority
News
Burkhardt Steel (formerly Gart Brothers)
Colfax
76
Hewlett-Packard
Eastman Kodak
Woodward
Hach Company
LeftHand
Networks
Denver
(HewlettPackard)
Au
6th Ave
Fort Collins
Wray
Colorado
20
Iron Works
th
DaVita Dialysis
Vulcan Iron Works
Trunk & Bag
N E B R A S K A Meek
103
ia
15 Johns Manville
rar
t
Midwest
Steel
25
287
Forney Industries
Cisco Systems
Ball Aerospace
nyon
CaBreckenridge
Arapahoe
104
105
Walden
28th St
119
Foothills Pkwy
Dia
University
of Colorado
Greeley
ValleyLab
Celestial
Seasonings Tea
go
40
106
Sterling
119
lH
th
wy
amboat
prings
WYOMING
107
Leanin Tree
(Trumble Greetings)
Fort Collins
Northrop Grumman
41
KANSAS
108
50 kilometers
30 miles
103
104
Academy
105
IBM
106
NEBRASKA
50 kilometers
30 miles
107
Broadway
es
nufacturers
and Employers
Neoplan
Lamar
Las
Animas
38
350
Del Norte
Walsenburg
160
160
Alamosa
Springfield
Durango
Pagosa
Springs
287
285
550
84
San Luis
Trinidad
160
Conejos
37
NEW MEXICO
OKLAHOMA
Defunct facility
Background: Southwestern Colorado landscape (Carol Highsmith). Top: Cliff Palace at Mesa Verde
National Park (William Henry Jackson), Durango & Silverton tourist train (Carol Highsmith),
Denver Civic Center. All courtesy Library of Congress. Bottom: Maps showing average maximum
temperatures in July and major manufacturers and employers.
MARCH
$29.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-4664-5
448 PAGES, 6 9
23 B&W ILLUS., 10 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY/MILITARY HISTORY
Of Related Interest
In this biography of Lucian K. Truscott, Jr., author Harvey Ferguson tells the story
of how Truscottdespite his hardscrabble beginnings, patchy education, and
questionable lucknot only made the rank of army lieutenant general, earning
a reputation as one of World War IIs most effective officers along the way, but
was also given an honorary promotion to four-star general seven years after his
retirement.
For all his accomplishments and celebrated heroic action, Truscott was not one
for self-aggrandizement, which may explain in part why historians have neglected
him until now. The Last Cavalryman, drawing on personal papers only recently
made available, gives the first full picture of this singular mans extraordinary
life and career. Ferguson describes Truscotts near-accidental entry into the U.S.
Cavalry (propelled by Pancho Villas 1916 raids) and his somewhat halting rise
through the ranksaided by fellow cavalryman George S. Patton, Jr., who steered
him into the nascent armored force at the right time. The author takes us through
Truscotts service in the Second World War, from creating the U.S. Army Rangers
to engineering the breakout from Anzio and leading the masterpiece invasion of
southern France. Ferguson finishes his narrative by detailing the generals postwar
work with the CIA, where he acted as President Dwight Eisenhowers eyes and ears
within the agency.
A compelling story in itself, this biography of Lucian K. Truscott, Jr.a cavalryman
to the lastfills out an important chapter in American military history.
Harvey Ferguson is retired as Assistant Chief of the Seattle Police Department and a
former Instructor of Criminal Justice at Shoreline Community College in Shoreline,
Washington.
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$29.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-4703-1
352 PAGES, 6 9
15 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY/U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
FEBRUARY
$19.95 PAPER 978-0-8061-4687-4
296 PAGES, 6.125 9.25
65 B&W ILLUS., 9 MAPS
U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
Not far below the largely undisturbed surface of these islands are the traces of
a California that flourished before historical time, vestiges of a complex forager
culture originating with the first humans to cross the Bering Land Bridge and spread
down the Pacific coast. This culture came to an end a mere 450 years ago with
the arrival of Spanish conquistadors and missionaries, whose practices effectively
depopulated the archipelago. The largely empty islands in turn attracted AngloAmerican agriculturalists, including Frederic Caire Chiless own ancestors, who
battled the elements to build empires based on cattle, sheep, wine, and wool. Today
adventure tourism is the heart of the islands economy, with the late-twentiethcentury formation of Channel Islands National Park, which opened five of the
islands to the general public.
For visitors and armchair travelers alike, this book weaves the strands of natural
history, island ecology, and human endeavor to tell the Channel Islands full story.
Frederic Caire Chiles is the author of Justinian Caire and Santa Cruz Island:
The Rise and Fall of a California Dynasty. He holds a Ph.D. in history from the
University of CaliforniaSanta Barbara and divides his time between London, Italy,
and California.
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$24.95 CLOTH 978-0-8061-4660-7
344 PAGES, 6 9
24 B&W ILLUS., 3 MAPS, 3 TABLES
U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
Wil Usdi
Thoughts from the Asylum, a Cherokee Novella
By Robert J. Conley
Foreword by Luther Wilson
Adopted into the Cherokee tribe as a teenager, William Holland Thomas
(18051893), known to the Cherokees as Wil Usdi (Little Will), went on to have
a distinguished career as lawyer, politician, and soldier. He spent the last decades
of his life in a mental hospital, where the pioneering ethnographer James Mooney
interviewed him extensively about Cherokee lifeways. The true story of Wil Usdis
life forms the basis for this historical novella, the final published work of fiction by
the late award-winning Cherokee author Robert J. Conley.
FEBRUARY
$14.95 PAPER 978-0-8061-4659-1
160 PAGES, 5 8.5
1 B&W ILLUS.
FICTION/AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
MOUNTAIN WINDSONG
A Novel of the Trail of Tears
By Robert J. Conley
$19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-2746-0
THE PEACE CHIEF
A Novel
By Robert J. Conley
$5.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3368-3
CHEROKEE DRAGON
A Novel
By Robert J. Conley
$5.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3370-6
Conley tells Wils story through the recollection of the old mans memories. Wil
learns the Cherokee language while working at a trading post. The chief Yonaguska
adopts the fatherless Wil, seeing to it that the boy dresses like a Cherokee and, for
all practical purposes, becomes one. Later, representing the Eastern Band of the
Cherokees in their negotiations with the federal government, Wil helps them remain
in their ancestral lands in North Carolina when most other Cherokees are sent off
on the Trail of Tears to the Indian Territory. Thus, Wil becomes popularly known as
the white chief of the tribe. He continues making money as a merchant and in 1848
is elected to the North Carolina state senate, where he assists in the creation of a
railroad system to serve the copper mines in neighboring Tennessee. During the Civil
War, he leads a Cherokee battalion in the Confederate Army and tries to persuade his
cousin Jefferson Davis to expand the battalion of fierce warriors into a regiment. His
achievements make his admission into an insane asylum all the more tragic.
The Wil Usdi of Conleys story is in increasingly bad health, mistreated in a mental
institution that to twenty-first-century readers is little more than a jail. He dreams
of women and warfare and boyhood games of stickball. Yet even in his demented
state, Wil is proud of his accomplishments and never loses his conviction that
Indians are more human than whites. Weaving together the disconnected stories
of Wil Usdis life, Conleys blend of thorough research and imaginative prose gives
readers a deep sense of post-removal Cherokee history.
Venerated Cherokee writer Robert J. Conley (19402014) is the author of Cherokee
Thoughts: Honest and Uncensored, as well as numerous novels, including The Witch
of Goingsnake and Other Stories and Mountain Windsong: A Novel of the Trail of
Tears. Luther Wilson is retired as Director of the University of New Mexico Press.
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Surviving Desires
Making and Selling Native Jewellery in the American Southwest
By Henrietta Lidchi
In its classic union of gleaming silver and blue turquoise, Native American jewellery
of the Southwest is an iconic art form. Internationally recognized and locally
significant, Native American jewellery has a compelling historyit represents
the persistence of tradition while encapsulating the vitality of Native American
communities and the continuously transforming nature of the jewellery makers art.
Author Henrietta Lidchi focuses on jewellery in the cultural economy of the
Southwest, exploring jewellery making as a decorative art form in constant
transition. She describes the jewellery as subject to a number of desires, controlled
at different times by government agencies, individual entrepreneurs, traders,
curators, and Native American communities. Lidchi explores the jewellery as craft,
material culture, commodity, and adornment. Considering the impact of tourism,
she discusses fakes in the market and the artists desires to codify traditional styles,
explaining how that can affect stylistic development and value. Surviving Desires
suggests the complexity and reinvention innate to Native American jewellery as a
commercial craft.
Drawing on the authors archival research and on interviews she conducted with
Native American jewellers and with traders, dealers, and curators, this volume
examines British collecting, exchanges between British and American institutions,
and the development of the British Museums contemporary collection.
Lavishly illustrated with 300 color photographs of jewellery in the British Museum,
the National Museums Scotland, and major collections in the United States,
Surviving Desires presents many previously unpublished pieces and showcases
works by Native American jewellers who include the best-known names in the field
today. The volume is a visually stunning exploration of the symbolic, economic, and
communal value of jewellery in the American Southwest.
Henrietta Lidchi, an anthropologist and curator, is currently Keeper of the
Department of World Cultures at National Museums Scotland. She is coeditor of
Imaging the Arctic (1998) and Visual Currencies (2009).
APRIL
$34.95 PAPER 978-0-8061-4850-2
272 PAGES, 8.5 11.5
300 COLOR ILLUS.
AMERICAN INDIAN/ART
Of Related Interest
10
NEW IN PAPERBACK
NEW IN PAPERBACK
NEW IN PAPERBACK
11
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A Strange Mixture
The Art and Politics of Painting Pueblo Indians
By Sascha T. Scott
Attracted to the rich ceremonial life and unique architecture of the New Mexico
pueblos, many early-twentieth-century artists depicted Pueblo peoples, places, and
culture in paintings. These artists encounters with Pueblo Indians fostered their
awareness of Native political struggles and led them to join with Pueblo communities
to champion Indian rights. In this book, art historian Sascha T. Scott examines the
ways in which non-Pueblo and Pueblo artists advocated for American Indian cultures
by confronting some of the cultural, legal, and political issues of the day.
Scott closely examines the work of five diverse artists, exploring how their art was
shaped by and helped to shape Indian politics. She places the art within the context
of the interwar period, 191530, a time when federal Indian policy shifted away
from forced assimilation and toward preservation of Native cultures. Through
careful analysis of paintings by Ernest L. Blumenschein, John Sloan, Marsden
Hartley, and Awa Tsireh (Alfonso Roybal), Scott shows how their depictions of
thriving Pueblo life and rituals promoted cultural preservation and challenged the
pervasive romanticizing theme of the vanishing Indian. Georgia OKeeffes images
of Pueblo dances, which connect abstraction with lived experience, testify to the
legacy of these political and aesthetic transformations.
FEBRUARY
$45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4484-9
280 PAGES, 9 11
58 COLOR AND 30 B&W ILLUS.
AMERICAN INDIAN/ART
Of Related Interest
Scott makes use of anthropology, history, and indigenous studies in her art historical
narrative. She is one of the first scholars to address varied responses to issues of
cultural preservation by aesthetically and culturally diverse artists, including Pueblo
painters. Beautifully designed, this book features nearly sixty artworks reproduced
in full color.
Sascha T. Scott is Assistant Professor of American Art and a member of the
Native American Studies faculty at Syracuse University. The author of articles
on Southwestern art, she has received a Clements Research Fellowship from the
Clements Center for Southwest Studies at Southern Methodist University.
MO TO RING WES T
V O L U M E
AU T O M O B I LE P IONEERS ,19001909
Edited by Peter J. Blodgett
AHCLARK.COM 800-627-7377
of the
A merican W est
since
In the first years of the twentieth century, motoring across the vast
expanses west of the Mississippi was at the very least an adventure and at most an
audacious stunt. As more motorists ventured forth, such travel became a curiosity
and, within a few decades, commonplace. For aspiring western travelers, automobiles
formed an integral part of their search for new experiences and destinationsand
like explorers and thrill seekers from earlier ages, these adventurers kept records
of their experiences. The scores of articles, pamphlets, and books they published,
collected for the first time in Motoring West, create a vibrant picture of the American
West in the age of automotive ascendancy, as viewed from behind the wheel.
Documenting the very beginning of Americans love affair with the automobile,
the pieces in this volumethe first of a planned multivolume seriesoffer a
panorama of motoring travelers visions of the burgeoning West in the first decade
of the twentieth century. Historian Peter J. Blodgetts sources range from forgotten
archives to company brochures to magazines such as Harpers Monthly, Sunset,
and Outing. Under headlines touting adventures in touring, land cruising, and
camping out with an automobile, voices from motorings early days instruct,
inform, and entertain. They chart routes through wild landscapes, explain the
finer points of driving coast to coast in a Franklin, and occasionally prescribe
touring outfits. Blodgetts engaging introductions to the volume and each piece
couch the writers commentaries within their time.
As reports of the regions challenges and pleasures stirred interest and spurred
travel, the burgeoning flow of traffic would eventually and forever alter the western
landscape and the westering motorists experience. The dispatches in Motoring
West illustrate not only how the automobile opened the American West before
1909 to more and more travelers, but also how the West began to change with
their arrival.
Peter J. Blodgett is the H. Russell Smith Foundation Curator of Western American
Manuscripts at the Huntington Library and author of Land of Golden Dreams:
California in the Gold Rush Decade, 18481858.
13
1902
MARCH
$34.95s CLOTH 978-0-87062-383-7
360 PAGES, 6.125 9.25
11 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP
U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
FATHER OF ROUTE 66
The Story of Cy Avery
By Susan Croce Kelly
$24.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-4499-3
CHRONICLING THE WEST FOR HARPERS
Coast to Coast with Frenzeny & Tavernier in 18731874
By Claudine Chalmers
$45.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-4376-7
ALONG ROUTE 66
By Quinta Scott
$26.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-3250-1
$19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3383-6
14
Do Facts Matter?
Information and Misinformation in American Politics
By Jennifer Hochschild and Katherine Levine Einstein
A democracy falters when most of its citizens are uninformed or misinformed, when
misinformation affects political decisions and actions, or when political actors
foment misinformationthe state of affairs the United States faces today, as this
timely book makes painfully clear. In Do Facts Matter? Jennifer L. Hochschild and
Katherine Levine Einstein start with Thomas Jeffersons ideal citizen, who knows
and uses correct information to make policy or political choices. What, then, the
authors ask, are the consequences if citizens are informed but do not act on their
knowledge? More serious, what if they do act, but on incorrect information?
FEBRUARY
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4686-7
248 PAGES, 5.5 8.5
3 B&W ILLUS., 11 CHARTS, 4 TABLES
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Of Related Interest
DISCONNECT
The Breakdown of Representation in American Politics
By Morris P. Fiorina
With Samuel J. Abrams
$39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4074-2
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4228-9
PARTY WARS
Polarization and the Politics of National Policy Making
By Barbara Sinclair
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3779-7
THE SENATE SYNDROME
The Evolution of Procedural Warfare
in the Modern U.S. Senate
By Steven S. Smith
$34.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4439-9
Analyzing the use, nonuse, and misuse of facts in various casessuch as the call
to impeach Bill Clinton, the response to global warming, Clarence Thomass
appointment to the Supreme Court, the case for invading Iraq, beliefs about Barack
Obamas birthplace and religion, and the Affordable Care ActHochschild and
Einstein argue persuasively that errors of commission (that is, acting on falsehoods)
are even more troublesome than errors of omission. While citizens inability or
unwillingness to use the facts they know in their political decision making may be
frustrating, their acquisition and use of incorrect knowledge pose a far greater
threat to a democratic political system.
Do Facts Matter? looks beyond individual citizens to the role that political elites
play in informing, misinforming, and encouraging or discouraging the use of
accurate or mistaken information or beliefs. Hochschild and Einstein show that if
a well-informed electorate remains a crucial component of a successful democracy,
the deliberate concealment of political facts poses its greatest threat.
Jennifer L. Hochschild is Henry LaBarre Jayne Professor of Government and
Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University. The
author, coauthor, or editor of numerous articles, chapters, and books, her most
recent publications include Creating a New Racial Order: How Immigration,
Multiracialism, Genomics, and the Young Can Remake Race in America
and Bringing Outsiders In: Transatlantic Perspectives on Immigrant Political
Incorporation. Katherine Levine Einstein is Assistant Professor of Political Science
at Boston University. Her current research focuses on racial inequality, political
segregation, and the splintering of U.S. metropolitan areas.
15
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JANUARY
$45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4672-0
$24.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-4707-9
288 PAGES, 6 9
6 CHARTS
U.S. HISTORY/RELIGION/POLITICAL SCIENCE
Of Related Interest
DISCONNECT
The Breakdown of Representation in American Politics
By Morris P. Fiorina
With Samuel J. Abrams
$39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4074-2
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4228-9
PARTY WARS
Polarization and the Politics of National Policy Making
By Barbara Sinclair
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3779-7
THE THIRD WAVE
Democratization in the Late 20th Century
By Samuel P. Huntington
$32.95s Paper 978-0-8061-2516-9
16
of the
A merican W est
since
1902
Of Related Interest
Collected and reproduced here for the first time, these journals and maps offer a
new and unique perspective on California in the mid-nineteenth century. Derbys
reports and journals appear alongside those of Robert Stockton Williamson,
William H. Warner, Edward O. C. Ord, Nathaniel Lyon, Henry Walton Wessells,
and Erasmus Darwin Keyes. These documents offer extraordinary firsthand views of
the environment, natural resources, geography, and early settlement, as well as the
effects of disease on Native and white populations. The writers detailed, often witty
insights offer new understandings of life in California during an era of momentous
change.
Historian Gary Clayton Anderson and anthropologist Laura Lee Anderson provide
historical, geographic, and biographical context in the books introduction and in
headnotes and annotations for each journal. With these editorial enhancements, the
documents reveal as much of the character of their authors and their time as of the
land and peoples they so carefully describe.
Gary Clayton Anderson, George Lynn Cross Professor of History at the University
of Oklahoma, is the author of The Conquest of Texas: Ethnic Cleansing in the
Promised Land, 18201875 and Ethnic Cleansing and the Indian: The Crime That
Should Haunt America. Laura Lee Anderson is the editor of Being Dakota: Tales
and Traditions of the Sisseton and Wahpeton.
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A merican W est
Before Custer
Surveying the Yellowstone, 1872
Edited by M. John Lubetkin
Hoping to complete its transcontinental route, the Northern Pacific Railroad set
out in 1872 to survey the Yellowstone Valley. An emissary from the Lakota chief
Sitting Bull had warned the two surveying expeditions (eastern and western) not to
enter the valley. But no onecertainly no Northern Pacific investorwas worried
about taking the Indian threat seriously.
As it turned out, the Indians were deadly seriousand successful. The firsthand
accounts compiled here by M. John Lubetkin document the surveys three-month
struggle with the Lakotas and other Plains Indian people. Before Custer: Surveying
the Yellowstone, 1872 tells the story of a military and public relations disaster.
Much to the surprised dismay of U.S. Army strategists and railroad executives, the
Indians repeatedly harrassed army forces of nearly a thousand men. One surveying
party turned back, without meeting its objectives, after a determined attack led by
Sitting Bull. The other also retreated, and one ambush it encountered resulted in
the death of a member of President Ulysses S. Grants family and the narrow escape
of the railroads lead engineer.
The previously unpublished documents that Lubetkin has collected and annotated
also tell a parallel story: that of the dire consequences of the railroads problems
for the country. When the Northern Pacifics expansion plans were thwarted,
the nations largest private banking house failed, leading to the Panic of 1873.
The fighting brought Sitting Bull to national attention and led directly to George
Armstrong Custers transfer to the Department of Dakota.
The vivid eyewitness accounts artfully assembled here reveal the failures of
alcoholic army commanders and show personal encounters between soldiers and
Indians, among them the formidable Lakota warrior known as Gall. Before Custer
tells of a little-known but crucial episode in the history of westward expansion and
Native peoples efforts to halt that expansion.
M. John Lubetkin is a retired cable television executive and the author of Custer
and the 1873 Yellowstone Survey, the novel Custers Gold, and Jay Cookes
Gamble: The Northern Pacific Railroad, the Sioux, and the Panic of 1873, winner
of the Little Big Horn Associates John M. Carroll Award (Book of the Year) and a
Spur Award for Best Historical Nonfiction from the Western Writers of America.
17
1902
LUBETKIN BEFORE CUSTER
since
MARCH
$34.95s CLOTH 978-0-87062-431-5
296 PAGES, 6.125 9.25
23 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS, 3 TABLES
U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
18
APRIL
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4706-2
480 PAGES, 6.125 9.25
21 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY/MILITARY HISTORY/U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
GEORGE CROOK
From the Redwoods to Appomattox
By Paul Magid
$39.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4207-4
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4441-2
GENERAL GEORGE CROOK
His Autobiography
By George Crook and Martin F. Schmitt
$19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-1982-3
GENERAL CROOK AND THE WESTERN FRONTIER
By Charles M. Robinson III
$39.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-3358-4
Describing campaigns against the Paiutes, Apaches, Sioux, and Cheyennes, Magids
vivid narrative explores Crooks abilities as an Indian fighter. The Apaches, among
the fiercest peoples in the West, called Crook the Gray Fox after an animal viewed
in their culture as a herald of impending death. Generals Grant and Sherman both
regarded him as indispensable to their efforts to subjugate the western tribes.
Though noted for his aggressiveness in combat, Crook was a reticent officer who
rarely raised his voice, habitually dressed in shabby civilian attire, and often rode
a mule in the field. He was also self-confident to the point of arrogance, harbored
fierce grudges, and because he marched to his own beat, got along poorly with his
superiors. He had many enduring friendships both in- and outside the army, though
he divulged little of his inner self to others and some of his closest comrades knew
he could be cold and insensitive.
As Magid relates these crucial episodes of Crooks life, a dominant contradiction
emerges: while he was an unforgiving warrior in the field, he not infrequently risked
his career to do battle with his military superiors and with politicians in Washington
to obtain fair treatment for the very people against whom he fought. Upon hearing
of the generals death in 1890, Chief Red Cloud spoke for his Sioux people: He, at
least, never lied to us. His words gave the people hope.
Paul Magid, a retired attorney who worked with the Peace Corps, then served as
General Counsel of the African Development Foundation, is the author of George
Crook: From the Redwoods to Appomattox.
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MARCH
$26.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4693-5
184 PAGES, 6 9
6 B&W ILLUS., 4 MAPS, 1 TABLE
U.S. HISTORY/MILITARY HISTORY
Of Related Interest
20
MARCH
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4694-2
304 PAGES, 6 9
23 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS
U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
Marx himself had no hope that landholding farmers would rise up as communist
revolutionaries. So it should come as no surprise that in places like South Dakota,
where 70 percent of the population owned land and worked for themselves,
people didnt take the threat of internal subversion very seriously. Mills plumbs the
historical record to show how residents of the plains stateswhile deeply patriotic
and supportive of the nations foreign policyresponded less than enthusiastically
to national anticommunist programs. Only South Dakota, for example, adopted
a loyalty oath, and it was fervently opposed throughout the state. Only Montana,
prodded by one state legislator, formed an investigation committeeone that never
investigated anyone and was quickly disbanded. Plains state people were, however,
highly churched and enthusiastically embraced federal attempts to use religion
as a bulwark against atheistic communist ideology. Even more enthusiastic was the
Great Plains response to the military buildup that accompanied Cold War politics,
as the construction of airbases and missile fields brought untold economic benefits
to the region.
A much-needed, nuanced account of how average citizens in middle America
experienced Cold War politics and policies, Cold War in a Cold Land is a significant
addition to the history of both the Cold War and the Great Plains.
David W. Mills holds a Ph.D. from North Dakota State University and teaches
American, European, and military history at Minnesota West Community and
Technical College in Worthington.
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JANUARY
$45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4645-4
568 PAGES, 6.125 9.25
35 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS, 1 TABLE
U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
Balancing sweeping change over time with a keen eye for detail, The Great Call-Up
unveils a little-known yet vital chapter in American military history.
Charles H. Harris III and Louis R. Sadler are professors emeritus of history at New
Mexico State University, Las Cruces. They are the coauthors of a half-dozen books,
including The Texas Rangers and the Mexican Revolution: The Bloodiest Decade,
19101920; The Secret War in El Paso: Mexican Revolutionary Intrigue, 1906
1920; and The Plan de San Diego: Tejano Rebellion, Mexican Intrigue.
22
FEBRUARY
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4644-7
320 PAGES, 6 9
10 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY
Of Related Interest
MIERA Y PACHECO
A Renaissance Spaniard in EighteenthCentury New Mexico
By John L. Kessell
$29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4377-4
PUEBLOS, SPANIARDS, AND THE
KINGDOM OF NEW MEXICO
By John L. Kessell
$19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-4122-0
INDIAN ALLIANCES AND THE SPANISH
IN THE SOUTHWEST, 7501750
By William B. Carter
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4302-6
Historian Carlos R. Herrera argues that Anzas formative years in Sonora, Mexico,
contributed to his success as a colonial administrator. Having grown up in New
Spains northern territory, Anza knew the daily challenges that the various ethnic
groups encountered in this region of limited resources, and he saw both the
advantages and the pitfalls of the regions strong Franciscan presence. Anzas
knowledge of frontier terrains and peoples helped make him a more effective
military and political leader.
When raiding tribes threatened the colony during his tenure as governor, Anza rode
into battle, killing the great Comanche war chief Cuerno Verde in 1779 and later
engineering a peace treaty formally concluded in 1786. As the colonial overseer of
the imperial policies known as the Bourbon Reforms, he also implemented a series
of changes in the colonys bureaucratic, judicial, and religious institutions. Charged
with militarizing New Mexico so that it could contribute to the maintenance of the
empire, Anza curtailed the social, political, and economic power the Franciscans
had long enjoyed and increased Spains authority in the region.
By combining administrative history with narrative biography, Herrera shows that
Juan Bautista de Anza was more than an explorer. Devoted equally to the Spanish
empire and to the North American region he knew intimately, Governor Anza
shaped the history of New Mexico at a critical juncture.
Carlos R. Herrera is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Borderlands
Institute at San Diego State UniversityImperial Valley. His numerous articles have
appeared in the Journal of the Southwest and Journal of the History of Sexuality.
23
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Junpero Serra
California, Indians, and the Transformation of a Missionary
By Rose Marie Beebe and Robert M. Senkewicz
Franciscan missionary friar Junpero Serra (17131784), one of the most widely
known and influential inhabitants of early California, embodied many of the ideas
and practices that animated the Spanish presence in the Americas. In this definitive
biography, translators and historians Rose Marie Beebe and Robert M. Senkewicz
bring this complex figure to life and illuminate the Spanish period of California and
the American Southwest.
In Junpero Serra: California, Indians, and the Transformation of a Missionary,
Beebe and Senkewicz focus on Serras religious identity and his relations with Native
peoples. They intersperse their narrative with new and accessible translations of many
of Serras letters and sermons, which allows his voice to be heard in a more direct and
engaging fashion.
Serra spent thirty-four years as a missionary to Indians in Mexico and California. He
believed that paternalistic religious rule offered Indians a better life than their oppressive
exploitation by colonial soldiers and settlers, which he deemed the only realistic
alternative available to them at that time and place. Serras unswerving commitment
to his vision embroiled him in frequent conflicts with Californias governors, soldiers,
native peoples, and even his fellow missionaries. Yet because he prevailed often enough,
he was able to place his unique stamp on the first years of Californias history.
Beebe and Senkewicz interpret Junpero Serra neither as a saint nor as the
personification of the Black Legend. They recount his life from his birth in a small
farming village on Mallorca. They detail his experiences in central Mexico and Baja
California, as well as the tumultuous fifteen years he spent as founder of the California
missions. Serras Franciscan ideals are analyzed in their eighteenth century context,
which allows readers to understand more fully the differences and similarities between
his world and ours. Combining history, culture, and linguistics, this new study conveys
the power and nuance of Serras voice and, ultimately, his impact on history.
Rose Marie Beebe is Professor of Spanish Literature at Santa Clara University. Robert
M. Senkewicz is Professor of History at Santa Clara University. Together they have
authored and edited numerous books, including The History of Alta California, Lands
of Promise and Despair: Chronicles of Early California, 15351846; Testimonios: Early
California through the Eyes of Women, 18151848; and To Toil in That Vineyard of
the Lord: Contemporary Scholarship on Junpero Serra.
MARCH
$39.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4868-7
514 PAGES, 7 10
61 B&W ILLUS., 37 COLOR PLATES, 11 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY
Of Related Interest
24
How the American West shaped Owen Wisters life and writings
MARCH
$24.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4675-1
280 PAGES, 5.5 8.5
9 B&W ILLUS.
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Of Related Interest
The Virginian, Wisters claim to literary fame, was published in 1902, but his
writing career actually began in 1891 and continued for twenty-five years after the
publication of his masterpiece. Scharnhorst traces Wisters western connections
up to and through the publication of The Virginian and shows that the author
remained deeply connected to the American West until his death in 1938. Like his
Harvard friend Theodore Roosevelt, Wister was the sickly scion of an eastern family
who recuperated in the West before returning to his home and inherited social
position. His life story is punctuated with appearances by such contemporaries as
Frederic Remington, Rudyard Kipling, and Ernest Hemingway.
Scharnhorst thoroughly discusses Wisters experiences in the West, including a
detailed chronology of his travels and the writings that grew out of them. He
offers numerous insights into Wisters adroit use of sources, and provides revealing
comparisons between Wisters western works and the writings of other authors
treating the same region.
The West, Scharnhorst shows, was the crucible in which Wister tested and expressed
his political opinions, most of them startlingly conservative by present standards.
Yet The Virginian remains the template for the western novel today. More than
any other Western writer of the past century and a half, Wisters career merits
resurrection.
Gary Scharnhorst is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of New Mexico
and author of numerous books, including Bret Harte: Opening the American
Literary West and Julian Hawthorne: The Life of a Prodigal Son.
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American Mythmaker
Walter Noble Burns and the Legends of
Billy the Kid, Wyatt Earp, and Joaqun Murrieta
By Mark J. Dworkin
Billy the Kid, Wyatt Earp, and Joaqun Murrieta are fixed in the American imagination
as towering legends of the Old West. But that has not always been the case. There was
a time when these men were largely forgotten relics of a bygone era. Then, in the early
twentieth century, an obscure Chicago newspaperman changed all that.
Walter Noble Burns (18721932) served with the First Kentucky Infantry during
the Spanish-American War and covered General John J. Pershings pursuit of
Pancho Villa in Mexico as a correspondent for the Chicago Tribune. However
history-making these forays may seem, they were only the beginning. In the last six
years of his life, Burns wrote three books that propelled New Mexico outlaw Billy
the Kid, Tombstone marshal Wyatt Earp, and California bandit Joaqun Murrieta
into the realm of legend.
Despite Burnss remarkable command of his subjectsbased on exhaustive research
and interviewshe has been largely ignored by scholars because of the popular,
even occasionally fictional, approach he employed. In American Mythmaker, the
first literary biography of Burns, Mark J. Dworkin brings Burns out of the shadows.
Through careful analysis of The Saga of Billy the Kid (1926), Tombstone, An Iliad
of the Southwest (1927), and The Robin Hood of Eldorado: The Saga of Joaquin
Murrieta (1932) and their reception, Dworkin shows how Burns used his journalistic
training to introduce the history of the American West to his eras general readership.
In the process, Burns made his subjects household names.
Are Burnss books fact or fiction? Was he a historian or a novelist? Dworkin
considers these questions as he uncovers the story behind Burnss mythmaking
works. A long-overdue biography of a writer who shaped our idea of western
history, American Mythmaker documents in fascinating detail the fashioning of
some of the greatest American legends.
Mark J. Dworkin (19462012) is the author of Mayas, Aztecs, and Incas: Mysteries
of Ancient Civilizations of Central and South America and numerous articles,
including several on Walter Noble Burns.
MARCH
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4685-0
288 PAGES, 6 9
12 B&W ILLUS.
BIOGRAPHY
Of Related Interest
ON A SILVER DESERT
The Life of Ernest Haycox
By Ernest Haycox Jr.
$24.95 Cloth 978-0-8061-3564-9
THE WEST OF BILLY THE KID
By Frederick Nolan
$29.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3104-7
JOHN FORD
Hollywoods Old Master
By Ronald L. Davis
$24.95 Paper 978-0-8061-2916-7
26
Life in a Corner
Cultural Episodes in Southeastern Utah, 18801950
By Robert S. McPherson
Community building in the Four Corners area of southeastern Utah required
specialized knowledge and a good bit of determination on the part of settlers who
wrested a livelihood from the Colorado Plateau. Robert S. McPherson, the regions
leading historian, draws on oral history and personal archives to write about
cowboys and homesteaders, loggers and sawmill operators, law enforcement officers
and bootleggers, miners and midwives, trappers and builders. In Life in a Corner, he
shapes their stories into a fascinating mosaic of cultural and environmental history
unique to this region.
APRIL
$29.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-4691-1
304 PAGES, 6 9
49 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP
U.S. HISTORY
Of Related Interest
McPherson demonstrates that, above all, settlers worked hard in order to succeed
in this often forbidding land. A first-person account of erecting a Latter-day Saint
tabernacle tells of volunteers using only what was under their feet or came from
a nearby mountain. Other chapters give an insiders perspective on cowboying in
canyon country, bringing law and order to a virtually lawless land, waging war
against wolves and coyotes, and homesteading on some of the last large desert
tracts in the continental United States.
But the most gripping stories center on the ingenuity of those who lived these
personal experiences. Only a veteran trapper would think of burying an alarm clock
to attract a coyote. Only a determined bootlegger would devise a saddle made of
leather-covered copper equipped with a spigot to dispense moonshine by the cup.
Only committed, or desperate, miners would sail with a one-way ticket to a gold
field in a hidden desert chasm.
What were midwives being taught at the turn of the century, and how did their
practice involve equal parts religious doctrine and medical procedure? What was a
qualifying examination like for the first forest rangers? And how did small closeknit communities handle slackers during World War I? Life in a Corner answers
these and many other questions while offering fresh perspectives on past events and
current controversies.
Robert S. McPherson is Professor of History at Utah State UniversityEastern,
Blanding Campus. He is the author or coauthor of numerous books on Navajo
history and the history of the Southwest, including Under the Eagle: Samuel
Holiday, Navajo Code Talker (with Samuel Holiday) and Viewing the Ancestors:
Perceptions of the Anaasz, Mokwic, and Hisatsinom.
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$34.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-5119-9
520 PAGES, 6 9
8 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS
BIOGRAPHY
Of Related Interest
HEATH WILLIAM WELLS AND THE STRUGGLE FOR THE OLD NORTHWEST
28
Grand Avenue
A Novel in Stories
By Greg Sarris
Afterword by Reginald Dyck
Grand Avenue runs through the center of the Northern California town of Santa
Rosa. One stretch of it is home not only to Pomo Indians making a life outside the
reservation but also to Mexicans, blacks, and some Portuguese, all trying to find
their way among the many obstacles in their turbulent world.
Bound together by a lone ancestor, the lives of the American Indians form the core
of these storiestales of healing cures, poison, family rituals, and a humor that
allows the inhabitants of Grand Avenue to see their own foibles with a saving grace.
MARCH
$19.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-4834-2
240 PAGES, 5.5 8.5
FICTION/AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
A teenage girl falls in love with a crippled horse marked for slaughter. An aging
healer summons her strength for one final song. A father seeks a bond with his
illegitimate son. A mother searches for the power to care for her cancer-stricken
daughters spirit. Here is a tapestry of lives rendered with the color, wisdom, and
quest for meaning that are characteristic of the traditional storytelling in which
they are rooted, a tradition Sarris grew up hearing and learning. Vibrant with the
emotions and realities of a changing world, these narrativesthe basis of an HBO
miniseriesare all equally stunning and from the heart.
Greg Sarris is author of the anthology Keeping Slug Woman Alive: A Holistic
Approach to American Indian Texts, the novel Watermelon Nights, and scripts for
screen and stage. He is Chairman of the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and
holds the Endowed Chair in Native American Studies at Sonoma State University.
Reginal Dyck is Professor of English at Capital University. His research and writing
focus on the work of Native American authors, including Greg Sarris.
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$19.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-5120-5
200 PAGES, 6 9
FICTION/AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
WAHKON-TAH
The Osage and the White Mans Road
By John Joseph Mathews
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-1699-0
SUNDOWN
By John Joseph Mathews
$19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-2160-4
TWENTY THOUSAND MORNINGS
An Autobiography
By John Joseph Mathews
Edited by Susan Kalter
$29.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4253-1
MATHEWS, KALTER OLD THREE TOES AND OTHER TALES OF SURVIVAL AND EXTINCTION
30
MARCH
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4669-0
216 PAGES, 6 9
16 B&W ILLUS., 4 MAPS, 2 TABLES, 2 GRAPHS
AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
THE POTAWATOMIS
Keepers of the Fire
By R. David Edmunds
$24.95 Paper 978-0-8061-2069-0
A NATION OF STATESMEN
The Political Culture of the StockbridgeMunsee Mohicans, 18151972
By James W. Oberly
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3932-6
31
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Clyde Warrior
Tradition, Community, and Red Power
By Paul R. McKenzie-Jones
The phrase Red Power, coined by Clyde Warrior (19391968) in the 1960s,
introduced militant rhetoric into American Indian activism. In this first-ever
biography of Warrior, historian Paul R. McKenzie-Jones presents the Ponca leader
as the architect of the Red Power movement, spotlighting him as one of the most
significant and influential figures in the fight for Indian rights.
The Red Power movement arose in reaction to centuries of oppressive federal
oversight of American Indian peoples. It comprised an assortment of grassroots
organizations that fought for treaty rights, tribal sovereignty, self-determination,
cultural preservation, and cultural relevancy in education. A cofounder of the
National Indian Youth Council, Warrior was among the movements most
prominent spokespeople. Throughout the 1960s, he blazed a trail of cultural and
political reawakening in Indian Country, using a combination of ultranationalistic
rhetoric and direct action protest.
McKenzie-Jones uses interviews with some of Warriors closest associates to
delineate the complexity of community, tradition, culture, and tribal identity
that shaped Warriors activism. For too many years, McKenzie-Jones maintains,
Warriors death at age twenty-nine overshadowed his intellect and achievements.
Red Power has been categorized as an American Indian interpretation of Black
Power that emerged after his death. This groundbreaking book brings to light,
however, previously unchronicled connections between Red Power and Black
Power that show the movements emerging side by side as militant, urgent calls for
social change. Warrior borrowed only the slogan as a metaphor for cultural and
community integrity.
Descended from hereditary chiefs, Warrior was immersed in Ponca history and
language from birth. McKenzie-Jones shows how this intimate experience, and the
perspective gained from participating in powwows, summer workshops, and college
Indian organizations, shaped Warriors intertribal approach to Indian affairs. This
long-overdue biography explores how Clyde Warriors commitment to culture,
community, and tradition formed the basis for his vision of Red Power.
Paul R. McKenzie-Jones is Visiting Lecturer in American Indian Studies at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
APRIL
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4705-5
272 PAGES, 6 9
25 B&W ILLUS.
BIOGRAPHY/AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
OJIBWA WARRIOR
Dennis Banks and the Rise of the
American Indian Movement
By Dennis Banks
$19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3691-2
RED POWER RISING
The National Indian Youth Council and
the Origins of Native Activism
By Bradley G. Shreve
$34.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-4178-7
$19.95s Paper 978-0-8061-4365-1
LOUD HAWK
The United States Versus the American Indian Movement
By Kenneth S. Stern
$19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3439-0
32
APRIL
$29.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4688-1
296 PAGES, 6 9
7 B&W ILLUS., 5 MAPS, 1 CHART
AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
I CHOOSE LIFE
Contemporary Medical and Religious
Practices in the Navajo World
By Maureen Trudelle Schwarz
$50.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-3941-8
$24.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3961-6
CHEROKEE TRAGEDY
The Ridge Family and the Decimation of a People
By Thurman Wilkins
$24.95 Paper 978-0-8061-2188-8
CHEROKEE MEDICINE MAN
The Life and Work of a Modern-Day Healer
By Robert J. Conley
$19.95 Paper 978-0-8061-3877-0
Keltons account begins with the long, false dawn between 1518 and the midseventeenth century, when sporadic encounters with Europeans did little to bring
Cherokees into the wider circulation of guns, goods, and germs that had begun to
transform Native worlds. By the 1690s English-inspired slave raids had triggered
a massive smallpox epidemic that struck the Cherokees for the first time. Through
the eighteenth century, Cherokees repeatedly responded to real and threatened
epidemicsand they did so effectively by drawing on their own medicine. Yet they
also faced terribly destructive physical violence from the British during the AngloCherokee War (17591761) and from American militias during the Revolutionary
War. Having suffered much more from the scourge of war than from smallpox,
the Cherokee population rebounded during the nineteenth century and, without
abandoning Native medical practices and beliefs, Cherokees took part in the
nascent global effort to eradicate Variola by embracing vaccination.
A far more complex and nuanced history of Variola among American Indians
emerges from these pages, one that privileges the lived experiences of the
Cherokees over the story of their supposedly ill-equipped immune systems and
counterproductive responses. Cherokee Medicine, Colonial Germs shows us how
Europeans and their American descendants have obscured the past with the stories
they left behind, and how these stories have perpetuated a simplistic understanding
of colonialism.
Paul Kelton is a Professor of History at the University of Kansas, Lawrence. He is
the author of Epidemics and Enslavement: Biological Catastrophe in the Native
Southeast, 14921715.
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JUNE
$45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4342-2
536 PAGES, 6 9
3 FIGURES, 29 TABLES, 1 CD
AMERICAN INDIAN/LANGUAGE
Of Related Interest
34
MARCH
$32.95s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4646-1
320 PAGES, 6 9
8 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP
U.S. HISTORY/AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
As this book makes clear, the Indian wars north of the Ohio River make sense only
within the context of Indians efforts to recruit their southern cousins to their cause.
The massive threat such alliances posed, recognized by contemporary whites from
all walks of life, prompted a terror that proved a major factor in the formulation
of Indian and military policy in North America. Indian unity, especially in the form
of military alliance, was the most consistent, universal fear of Anglo-Americans
in the late colonial, Revolutionary, and early national periods. This fear was so
pervasiveand so useful for unifying whitesthat Americans exploited it long after
the threat of a general Indian alliance had passed.
As the nineteenth century wore on, and as slavery became more widespread and
crucial to the American South, fears shifted to Indian alliances with former slaves,
and eventually to slave rebellion in general. The growing American nation needed
and utilized a rhetorical threat from the other to justify the uglier aspects of empire
buildinga phenomenon that Owens tracks through a vast array of primary sources.
Drawing on eighteen different archives, covering four nations and eleven states,
and on more than six-dozen period newspapersand incorporating the views of
British and Spanish authorities as well as their American rivalsRed Dreams, White
Nightmares is the most comprehensive account ever written of how fear, oftentimes
resulting in Indian-hating, directly influenced national policy in early America.
Robert M. Owens is Associate Professor of History at Wichita State University and
author of Mr. Jeffersons Hammer: William Henry Harrison and the Origins of
American Indian Policy.
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APRIL
$24.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-4699-7
256 PAGES, 6 9
3 B&W ILLUS., 2 CHARTS
AMERICAN INDIAN
Of Related Interest
36
APRIL
$45.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4702-4
288 PAGES, 7 10
27 B&W ILLUS., 11 MAPS
LATIN AMERICA
Of Related Interest
With evocative and thoughtful essays by leading scholars of Maya culture, The
Chol Maya of Chiapas, the first collection to focus fully on the Chol Maya, takes
readers deep into ancient caves and reveals new dimensions of Chol cosmology.
In contemporary Chol culture the contributors find a wealth of historical
material that they then interweave with archaeological data to yield surprising
and illuminating insights. The colonial and twentieth-century descendants of the
Post-Classic Period Chol and Lacandon Chol, for instance, provide a window on
the history and conquest of the early Maya. Several authors examine Early Classic
paintings in the Chol ritual cave known as Jolja that document ancient cave
ceremonies not unlike Chol rituals performed today, such as petitioning a cavedwelling mountain spirit for health, rain, and abundant harvests.
Other essays investigate deities identified with caves, mountains, lightning, and
meteors to trace the continuity of ancient Maya beliefs through the centuries,
in particular the ancient origin of contemporary rituals centering on the Chol
mountain deity Don Juan. An appendix containing three Chol folktales and their
English translations rounds out the volume.
Charting paths literal and figurative to earlier trade routes, pre-Columbian sites,
and ancient rituals and beliefs, The Chol Maya of Chiapas opens a fresh, richly
informed perspective on Maya culture as it has evolved and endured over the ages.
Karen Bassie-Sweet is Research Associate at the University of Calgary and codirects
the Jolja Cave Project in Mexico. She is author of Maya Sacred Geography and
the Creator Deities. Robert M. Laughlin is author of Mayan Tales from Chiapas,
Mexico. Nicholas A. Hopkins is coeditor of Essays on Otomanguean Culture
History. Andrs Brizuela Casimir is an archaeologist and Head of the Department
of Historical Monuments of the State of Chiapas.
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FEBRUARY
$50.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4629-4
$34.95s PAPER 978-0-8061-4630-0
216 PAGES, 8.5 11
98 COLOR ILLUS., 4 MAPS, 3 TABLES
LATIN AMERICA/ART
Of Related Interest
TLACUILOLLI
Style and Contents of the Mexican Pictorial
Manuscripts with a Catalog of the Borgia Group
By Karl Anton Nowotny
$75.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-3653-0
MESOAMERICAN MEMORY
Enduring Systems of Remembrance
By Amos Megged and Stephanie Wood
$55.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-4235-7
CODEX CHIMALPAHIN
Society and Politics in Mexico Tenochtitlan,
Tlatelolco, Texcoco, Culhuacan, and Other
Nahua Altepetl in Central Mexico
By don Domingo de San Anton Munon Chimalpahin
Quauhtlehuanitzin
Translated and edited by Arthur J. O. Anderson
and Susan Schroeder
$49.95s Cloth 978-0-8061-2921-1
38
The Huasteca
Culture, History, and Interregional Exchange
Edited by Katherine A. Faust and Kim N. Richter
APRIL
$55.00s CLOTH 978-0-8061-4704-8
256 PAGES, 8 10
190 B&W ILLUS., 2 MAPS, 6 TABLES
LATIN AMERICA
Of Related Interest
FEEDING CHILAPA
The Birth, Life, and Death of a Mexican Region
By Chris Kyle
$45.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-3920-3
$26.95s Paper 978-0-8061-3921-0
INDIAN CONQUISTADORS
Indigenous Allies in the Conquest of Mesoamerica
Edited by Laura E. Matthew and Michel R. Oudijk
$45.00s Cloth 978-0-8061-3854-1
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MESOAMERICAN MEMORY
Enduring Systems of Remembrance
By Amos Megged and Stephanie Wood
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The Huasteca, a region on the northern Gulf Coast of Mexico, was for centuries
a pre-Columbian crossroads for peoples, cultures, arts, and trade. Its multiethnic
inhabitants influenced, and were influenced by, surrounding regions, ferrying unique
artistic styles, languages, and other cultural elements to neighboring areas and
beyond. In The Huasteca: Culture, History, and Interregional Exchange, a range
of authorities on art, history, archaeology, and cultural anthropology bring longoverdue attention to the regions rich contributions to the pre-Columbian world.
They also assess, to a lesser degree, how the Huasteca fared from colonial times
to the present. The authors call critical, even urgent attention to a region highly
significant to Mesoamerican history but long neglected by scholars.
Editors Katherine A. Faust and Kim N. Richter put the plight and the importance
of the Huasteca into historical and cultural context. They address challenges to
study of the region, ranging from confusion about the term Huasteca (a legacy
of the Aztec conquest in the late fifteenth century) to present-day misconceptions
about the regions role in pre-Columbian history. Many of the contributions
included here consider the Huastecas interactions with other regions, particularly
the American Southeast and the southern Gulf Coast of Mexico. Pre-Columbian
Huastec inhabitants, for example, wore trapezoid-shaped shell ornaments unique in
Mesoamerica but similar to those found along the Mississippi River.
With extensive examples drawn from archaeological evidence, and supported by
nearly 200 images, the contributors explore the Huasteca as a junction where art,
material culture, customs, ritual practices, and languages were exchanged. While
most of the essays focus on pre-Columbian periods, a few address the early colonial
period and contemporary agricultural and religious practices. Together, these essays
illuminate the Huastecas significant legacy and the cross-cultural connections that
still resonate in the region today.
Katherine A. Faust is coeditor of Mesoamerican Figurines: Small-Scale Indices of
Large-Scale Social Phenomena. Kim N. Richter is a Senior Research Specialist to the
Director at the Getty Research Institute.
39
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Kim Allen Scott tells the tale of an educated and inventive man
who strove for recognition throughout his life. Scotts critical
biography examines Doanes accomplishments and failures,
and traces the frustrated efforts of his widow to see her
husband properly enshrined in history. A psychological portrait
of a complex and intriguing individual, Yellowstone Denied
is also a revealing look at military culture, scientific discovery,
and western expansion.
Kim Allen Scott is Professor and University Archivist at
Montana State University, Bozeman. His numerous articles on
Yellowstone National Park, Montana history, and the Civil War
have appeared in Montana The Magazine of Western History,
the Arkansas Historical Quarterly, Kansas History, and the
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RE CE N T R E L E A SE S
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Index
A
B
Bagley, South Pass, 40
Bassie-Sweet, et al., The Chol Maya of
Chiapas, 36
Battle of Lake Champlain, The, Schroeder, 19
Beebe/Senkewicz, Junpero Serra, 23
Before Custer, Lubetkin, 17
Blodgett, Motoring West, 1213
Bracketing the Enemy, Walker, 43
Brownstone, et al., The Lienzo of Tlapiltepec, 37
C
Californias Channel Islands, Chiles, 6
Cherokee Medicine, Colonial Germs, Kelton, 32
Cherokee Reference Grammar, MontgomeryAnderson, 33
Chiles, Californias Channel Islands, 6
Chol Maya of Chiapas, The, Bassie-Sweet,
et al., 36
Clyde Warrior, McKenzie-Jones, 31
Cold War in a Cold Land, Mills, 20
Colorado, Noel/Zuber-Mallison, 23
Conley, Wil Usdi, 8
Cubbison, All Canada in the Hands of the
British, 43
D
Darkest Period, The, Parks, 41
Dempsey/Fell, Mining the Summit, 39
Do Facts Matter? Hochschild/Einstein, 14
Dworkin, American Mythmaker, 25
G
Gathering the Potawatomi Nation, Wetzel, 30
Generous and Merciful Enemy, A, Krebs, 43
Grand Avenue, Sarris, 28
Gray Fox, The, Magid, 18
Great Call-Up, The, Harris/Sadler, 21
H
Harris/Sadler, The Great Call-Up, 21
Heat-Moon/Wallace, An Osage Journey to
Europe, 18271830, 42
Heath, William Wells and the Struggle for the
Old Northwest, 27
Herrera, Juan Bautista de Anza, 22
Hertzke, Religious Freedom in America, 15
Hochschild/Einstein, Do Facts Matter? 14
Horses That Buck, Kahn, 10
Huasteca, The, Faust/Richter, 38
M
Magid, The Gray Fox, 18
Mathews, Old Three Toes and Other Tales of
Survival and Extinction, 29
McKenzie-Jones, Clyde Warrior, 31
McNenly, Native Performers in Wild West
Shows, 42
McPherson, Life in a Corner, 26
Mills, Cold War in a Cold Land, 20
Mining the Summit, Dempsey/Fell, 39
Montgomery-Anderson, Cherokee Reference
Grammar, 33
Moroni and the Swastika, Nelson, 1
Moulton, Valentine T. McGillycuddy, 40
K
Kahn, Horses That Buck, 10
Kelton, Cherokee Medicine, Colonial Germs, 32
Krebs, A Generous and Merciful Enemy, 43
L
Last Cavalryman, The, Ferguson, 4
Lewis and Clark among the Nez Perce,
Pinkham/Evans, 10
Lidchi, Surviving Desires, 9
R
Red Dreams, White Nightmares, Owens, 34
Religious Freedom in America, Hertzke/
Harper, 15
Reyhner, Teaching Indigenous Students, 35
S
Saloons, Prostitutes, and Temperance in Alaska
Territory, Spude, 7
Sander, Invasion of Laos, 1971, 10
Sarris, Grand Avenue, 28
Scharnhorst, Owen Wister and the West, 24
Schroeder, The Battle of Lake Champlain, 19
Scott, K., A Strange Mixture, 11
Scott, S., Yellowstone Denied, 39
South Pass, Bagley, 40
Spude, Saloons, Prostitutes, and Temperance in
Alaska Territory, 7
Strange Mixture, A, Scott, 11
Surviving Desires, Lidchi, 9
T
Teaching Indigenous Students, Reyhner, 35
V
Valentine T. McGillycuddy, Moulton, 40
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