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Epidemics and Enslavement - Biological Catastrophe in the Native Southeast, 1492-1715 (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R541
Discovery Miles 5 410
You Save: R97
(15%)
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Epidemics and Enslavement - Biological Catastrophe in the Native Southeast, 1492-1715 (Paperback, New)
Series: Indians of the Southeast
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List price R638
Loot Price R541
Discovery Miles 5 410
You Save R97 (15%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Epidemics and Enslavement is a groundbreaking examination of the
relationship between the Indian slave trade and the spread of Old
World diseases in the colonial southeastern United States. Paul
Kelton scrupulously traces the pathology of early European
encounters with Native peoples of the Southeast and concludes that,
while indigenous peoples suffered from an array of ailments before
contact, Natives had their most significant experience with new
germs long after initial contacts in the sixteenth century. In
fact, Kelton places the first region-wide epidemic of smallpox in
the 1690s and attributes its spread to the Indian slave trade. From
1696 to 1700, Native communities from the Atlantic Coast to the
Mississippi Valley suffered catastrophic death tolls because of
smallpox. The other diseases that then followed in smallpox's wake
devastated the indigenous societies. Kelton found, however, that
such biological catastrophes did not occur simply because the
region's Natives lacked immunity. Over the last half of the
seventeenth century, the colonies of Virginia and South Carolina
had integrated the Southeast into a larger Atlantic world that
carried an unprecedented volume of people, goods, and ultimately
germs into indigenous villages. Kelton shows that English commerce
in Native slaves in particular facilitated the spread of smallpox
and made indigenous peoples especially susceptible to infection and
mortality as intense violence forced malnourished refugees to
huddle in germ-ridden, compact settlements. By 1715 the Native
population had plummeted, causing a collapse in the very trade that
had facilitated such massive depopulation. Paul Kelton is an
associate professor of history at the University of Kansas.
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