This fascinating survey blends anthropology and military history
to reexamine the European invasion of North America in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Tracing conflicts beginning
with King Philip's War in New England and ending with the conquest
of Indians in the Old Northwest, Armstrong Strakey shows the
evolution of both Indian and European warfare methods during this
turbulent period.
Rather than considering military history as an isolated
phenomenon, Starkey describes military encounters as only one
aspect of a more fundamental conflict of cultures. Drawing on
recent scholarship in ethnohistory, Starkey dismantles numerous
stereotypes of Indian and European warriors and methods of warfare.
He shows that Indians and Europeans were allies as frequently as
they were enemies and that the most successful European fighters
were those who adopted the Indian way of war as their own. Thus,
according to the author, the story of European and Native American
warfare is as much one of cultural exchanges as cultural
conflict.
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