Into the American Woods: Negotiators on the Pennsylvania Frontier

Awards:   Short-listed for Pulitzer Prize 2000 Winner of Bancroft Prize 2000
Author:   James H. Merrell (Vassar College)
Publisher:   WW Norton & Co
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780393319767


Pages:   464
Publication Date:   29 March 2000
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Into the American Woods: Negotiators on the Pennsylvania Frontier


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Awards

  • Short-listed for Pulitzer Prize 2000
  • Winner of Bancroft Prize 2000

Overview

James Merrell's brilliant book is an account of the ""go-betweens,"" the Europeans and Indians who moved between cultures on the Pennsylvania frontier in efforts to maintain the peace. It is also a reflection on the meanings of wilderness to the colonists and natives of the New World. From the Quaker colony's founding in the 1680s into the 1750s, Merrell shows us how the go-betweens survived in the woods, dealing with problems of food, travel, lodging, and safety, and how they sought to bridge the vast cultural gaps between the Europeans and the Indians. The futility of these efforts became clear in the sickening plummet into war after 1750. ""A stunningly original and exceedingly well-written account of diplomacy on the edge of the Pennsylvania wilderness.""—Publishers Weekly

Full Product Details

Author:   James H. Merrell (Vassar College)
Publisher:   WW Norton & Co
Imprint:   WW Norton & Co
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 14.20cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 21.10cm
Weight:   0.470kg
ISBN:  

9780393319767


ISBN 10:   0393319768
Pages:   464
Publication Date:   29 March 2000
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A pathbreaking scholarly work, by one of the nation's leading historians of the interaction between Native Americans and European newcomers in early America. In this deeply researched book, Bancroft Prize-winning historian Merrell (The Indians' New World, not reviewed) unearths the lives of the go-betweens - translators, diplomats, traders, and others - who for a time linked the disparate peoples of colonial America into a network of functioning relationships. This volume is also an extended essay on. the meaning and significance of woodlands and wilderness to New World natives and colonists. With Pennsylvania as its focus, the book traces the lives and activities of people of whom many historians will never have heard - of transcultural Indians (such as Shekallamy) and colonists (such as Conrad Weiser) who had unmatched ability to negotiate the frontier's cultural terrain. That terrain was a forested borderland of language, trade, religion, settlement, and treaty-making. And its go-betweening inhabitants, whom Merrell brilliantly brings to life, faced not just formidable obstacles of culture but the more tangible ones of food, travel, lodging, and safety as they tried to create comity between people of vastly different ways and thought. But cultural borders were never to be fully crossed, nor peace easily secured. Whatever these dedicated go-betweens might attempt, armed skirmishes, then war, eventually came to the colony by the 1760s, and no go-betweens could save the natives from the resulting disaster. Never before has this generally well-known story been told this way - as a history of identity, acculturation, nature, and words. Anthropologists, ethnographers, even naturalists and linguists, as well as historians, will welcome and mine the book for years. Written in language as robust as a monograph will allow, the book is a stunning achievement. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

James H. Merrell is professor of history at Vassar College and the author of (Norton), winner of the Bancroft Prize.

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