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White Captives - Gender and Ethnicity on the American Frontier (Paperback, New edition)
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White Captives - Gender and Ethnicity on the American Frontier (Paperback, New edition)
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White Captives offers a new analysis of Indian-white coexistence on
the American frontier. June Namias shows that visual, literary, and
historical accounts of the capture of Euro-Americans by Indians
during the colonial Indian Wars, the American Revolution, and the
Civil War are commentaries on the uncertain boundaries of gender,
race, and culture. She demonstrates that these captivity materials,
which most often feature as victims white women and children (the
most vulnerable members of their communities), vividly portray
anxieties about gender and ethnicity on the frontier and in
American society. Namias begins by comparing the experiences and
representations of male and female captives over time and on
successive frontiers, from colonial New England to
mid-nineteenth-century Minnesota, and explores how the stories
transformed victims of historical circumstance into heroes and
heroines. She then uses the narratives of three captives - Jane
McCrea, Mary Jemison, and Sarah Wakefield - as case studies,
arguing that they describe the fears of sexual contact between
native cultures and white settlers and illustrate issues of female
survival, independence, and competence. Moreover, she finds that
these and other stories also reflect the major role of women and
children in the migration process. According to Namias, both the
historical reality and the reworked tales of capture offered white
Americans new ways of looking at gender and ethnic relations by
contrasting their own roles and value with those presumed to be
Indian. Thus, while elements of horror, propaganda, mythmaking, and
ethnographic documentary characterized the accounts, captivity
materials served a larger purpose by providinga framework for
notions of gender and cultural conflict on the frontier.
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