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Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title Land
ownership was not the sole reason for conflict between Indians and
English, Jenny Pulsipher writes in Subjects unto the Same King, a
book that cogently redefines the relationship between Indians and
colonists in seventeenth-century New England. Rather, the story is
much more complicated-and much more interesting. It is a tale of
two divided cultures, but also of a host of individuals, groups,
colonies, and nations, all of whom used the struggle between and
within Indian and English communities to promote their own
authority. As power within New England shifted, Indians appealed
outside the region-to other Indian nations, competing European
colonies, and the English crown itself-for aid in resisting the
overbearing authority of such rapidly expanding societies as the
Massachusetts Bay Colony. Thus Indians were at the center-and not
always on the losing end-of a contest for authority that spanned
the Atlantic world. Beginning soon after the English settled in
Plymouth, the power struggle would eventually spawn a devastating
conflict-King Philip's War-and draw the intervention of the crown,
resulting in a dramatic loss of authority for both Indians and
colonists by century's end. Through exhaustive research, Jenny Hale
Pulsipher has rewritten the accepted history of the Indian-English
relationship in colonial New England, revealing it to be much more
complex and nuanced than previously supposed.
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