Unrepentant Dakota Woman: Angelique Renville and the Struggle for Indigenous Identity, 1845–1876

Author:   Linda M. Clemmons
Publisher:   South Dakota State Historical Society
ISBN:  

9781941813485


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   01 September 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Unrepentant Dakota Woman: Angelique Renville and the Struggle for Indigenous Identity, 1845–1876


Overview

Born in Minnesota in 1845, the daughter of a prominent mixed-ancestry Dakota family, Angelique Renville (1845–1876) learned traditional Dakota ways of life from her relatives while navigating the complex multi-cultural world of the declining fur trade. At age six, along with her younger sister Agnes, she was formally adopted by Protestant missionaries Stephen and Mary Riggs, who did their utmost to erase her Dakota identity and educate her as a ""proper"" Christian woman. Despite their best efforts, Angelique remained close with her Dakota kin, especially her mother and siblings. After a frustrating year at a female seminary in Ohio, Angelique worked as a domestic servant for a family friend, ostensibly continuing her education. The outbreak of the U.S.–Dakota War in 1862 and Agnes's subsequent death in a U.S. Army prison camp changed everything. Returning to Minnesota, Angelique turned her back on the missionaries, entered a polygamous marriage with a Dakota man, and moved with her relatives to the Dakota Territory, where she increasingly distanced herself from the Riggs family. In 1869, she took legal action to emancipate herself from the guardianship of Stephen Riggs and to seek legal redress against unscrupulous loan sharks who had illegally sold her lands. It was an extraordinary act for an American Indian woman of the time, and she faced a steep uphill battle in court. Despite her untimely death of tuberculosis in 1876, Angelique Renville lived her final years on her own terms. Author Linda Clemmons works from extensive primary sources, including letters written by Angelique herself—a rarity for American Indian women who are all too often silent or ignored in the historical record. Unrepentant Dakota Woman follows Angelique's remarkable struggle for Indigenous identity and self-determination, while revealing new insights into relations between missionaries and their converts, education of American Indians, disparities between Native and Euro-American conceptions of family, and the challenges faced by Dakotas during one of the most tumultuous periods in their history. Includes an appendix of letters written by Angelique Renville.

Full Product Details

Author:   Linda M. Clemmons
Publisher:   South Dakota State Historical Society
Imprint:   South Dakota State Historical Society
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.20cm , Length: 23.20cm
Weight:   0.613kg
ISBN:  

9781941813485


ISBN 10:   1941813488
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   01 September 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

""Unrepentant Dakota Woman represents an important methodological study that conveys how ignored histories can add depth to our study of the past. Indigenous women, Clemmons posits, should be central to studying and understanding this period; her book succeeds in supporting such an argument. Readers will find stories of power and resistance that offer fresh perspectives on Indigenous women during the nineteenth century."" — John R. Legg, George Mason University (review from The Western Historical Quarterly, Winter 2024 issue) ""Linda Clemmons has written on a topic little explored in Indian-white relations in the mid-19th Century. . . . In a fascinating and troubling narrative, Clemmons succeeds in exposing how missionaries pressured Native people to accept the white man's Christian values."" — Abraham Hoffman, Western Writers of America, Roundup Magazine, April 2024 Issue


Unrepentant Dakota Woman represents an important methodological study that conveys how ignored histories can add depth to our study of the past. Indigenous women, Clemmons posits, should be central to studying and understanding this period; her book succeeds in supporting such an argument. Readers will find stories of power and resistance that offer fresh perspectives on Indigenous women during the nineteenth century."" — John R. Legg, George Mason University (review from The Western Historical Quarterly, Winter 2024 issue) ""Linda Clemmons has written on a topic little explored in Indian-white relations in the mid-19th Century. . . . In a fascinating and troubling narrative, Clemmons succeeds in exposing how missionaries pressured Native people to accept the white man's Christian values."" — Abraham Hoffman, Western Writers of America, Roundup Magazine, April 2024 Issue


Author Information

Linda M. Clemmons is a professor of nineteenth-century American and Native American history and the current director of the Honors Program at Illinois State University in Normal, Illinois. She is the author of Dakota in Exile: The Forgotten Stories of Captives in the Aftermath of the U.S.-Dakota War (University of Iowa Press) and Conflicted Mission: Faith, Disputes, and Deception on the Dakota Frontier (Minnesota Historical Society Press). Her work examines the interaction of Protestant missionaries and Dakota families in the nineteenth century.

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