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Full Description
Tells the complete story of Native American history, including the native perspective. First Americans provides a history of Native Americans, from their earliest appearance in North America to the present, that covers the complexity and diversity of their past. The text demonstrates Native Americans' participation in determining their own future and helps students place Native American history in context with national and international developments. Present throughout the text is the "native voice," giving American Indians' perspectives on historical developments. The text also enforces the reality that native people retain a presence in the U.S. today as a growing population with a rich diversity of roles, ideas, and contributions. A better teaching and learning experienceThis program will provide a better teaching and learning experience-for you and your students. Here's how:Improve Critical Thinking - To enhance student comprehension, each chapter includes features such as Chronologies, Key Questions, Review Questions, and Recommended Readings. Engage Students - Special features are included to highlight the native voice and support the themes presented. Support Instructors - Instructor's Resource Center, Instructor's Manual, Test Bank, MyTest, and PowerPoint presentations are available to be packaged with this text. For the combined volume of this text, search ISBN-10: 0132069482 For volume two of this text, search ISBN-10: 0205055877
Contents
Found in this section:1. Brief Table of Contents2. Full Table of ContentsChapter 1 Native North America before European Contact Chapter 2 Native Peoples and European Newcomers, 982-1585 Chapter 3 Spanish Borderlands, 1527-1758 Chapter 4 Seventeenth-Century Eastern Woodlands, 1607-1689 Chapter 5 Empire, 1700-1763 Chapter 6 The Indians' Revolution, 1763-1814 Chapter 7 Removal, 1801-1846 Chapter 8 Western Indians and the United States, 1800-1850 Preface Supplementary Material Acknowledgments About the Authors Chapter 1: Native North America Before European Contact Stories versus Science Beginnings We Were Always Here The Scientific Evidence Reading History The Kwakiutl Story of the Deluge Clovis and Folsom Cultures Changes in the West California Indians The Northwest The Great Basin and the Plains Agriculture-Based Societies in the Southwest Cultural Diversity and the Arrival of Maize The "Chaco Phenomenon" Hohokam and Mesa Verde CulturesSeeing History Anasazi Sites Compared Eastern Woodlands Early Eastern Woodlands Traditions Adena and Hopewell Cultures Mississipian Chiefdoms The Iroquois Seeing History Chiefdoms Maintaining Power Through Images Reading History The Iroquois Origin Story Conclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History Online Chapter 2: Native Peoples and European Newcomers, 982-1590 Conquests, Colonies, and Contradictions An Iberian New World Order Christopher Columbus and the West Indies: The Tainos Encounter Spaniards The Maya, Aztec, and Inca WorldsMaya Chichen Itza and the Mayan City-States Maya Women and the City-States Aztecs Pre-Aztec States in Mexico Rise of the Aztec Empire Tenochtitlan Aztec Gods and Religion Aztec Women in a Warrior Culture Inca Growth of the Inca State Inca Rule The Power of Inca Women Spanish Conquest, Spanish Rule Fall of Tenochtitlan Profile Malintzin, A Woman Negotiates with the Aztecs Reading History A Woman's Voice FromPostconquest Mexico: Ana Juana From Culhuacan Conquest of the Incas Profile Titu Cusi Yupanqui, an Inca Elite After Conquest Conquest of the Maya Reading History A Voice from the Mayan NewWorld Inquisition: Francisco Chuc of Sahcaba, August 11, 1562 French and English NewcomersPre-Columbian Encounters in North America: The Norse Early Expeditions to the Northeast Native Peoples and the French along the St. Lawrence River Algonquians and the English at RoanokeProfile Manteo, the Roanoke Interpreter Conclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History Online Chapter 3: Spanish Borderlands, 1527-1758 On the FringesLa Florida: A Maritime BorderlandThe Indian Landscape of La Florida Friars and Chiefdoms Mission Life Rebellion and Decline Southeast Chiefdoms and Hernando De Soto The Southwest Borderlands Women and Caddoan Power The Texas Mission-Presidio Complex The World of the Pueblos New Power in the Sword: The Spanish Invasion New Power in the Church: The Franciscan Pueblo Missions New Power in Governance: Encomenderos and Colonial Rule Rebellion: The Pueblo Revolt of 1680Reading History Declaration of the Indian, Juan.Place on the Rio del Norte, December, 18, 1681 Northern Mining FrontiersSerrano Peoples: Native Life in Sonora Miners, Ranchers, and Moving Frontiers Missionaries: Serrano Peoples and the JesuitsWanderers and Communities: Native Resistance to Spanish Rule Early Borderlands Connections in the Southwest Horses and Networks of Masculine Trade and Warfare The Rise of the Comanches Conclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History Online Chapter 4: Seventeenth-Century Eastern Woodlands, 1607-1689 Worlds Apart Tsenacommacah The Rise of the Powhatan Confederacy Powhatan and the English: Trade and Conflict Indian War and the Emergence of Virginia Profile Pocahontas in the Atlantic World Southern New England Indians Encounter the English Native Americans and Plymouth Bay New England Indians Face English Expansion Christianity and the Praying Town Model Mohegans Confederacies, Empires, and VillagesThe Huron Ascendancy War and Mourning: Five Nations' Ferocity Middle Grounding: The Pays d'en haut Transformation of the Five Nations Profile Kateri Tekakwitha Maturing Colonies Ending a Century in Conflict: Metacom's War and Bacon's Rebellion Metacom's War Reading History Mary Rowlandson's Captivity Narrative, 1682 Bacon's Rebellion Conclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History Online Chapter 5: Empire, 1700-1763 Empires, a Chief, and a Prophet Indians and Empires in the NortheastDeerfield on the Edge of Empire Reading History John Williams, Redeemed Captive Returning to Zion, 1774 Returning to New France and Shifting Strategies New England Indians "Behind the Frontier" Land and Indian Communities Native Peoples and the Economics of the British Empire in New England Religion, Education, and Indian Sovereignty Profile The Transient Life of Sarah Gardner, Indian Woman Reading History Samson Occom Tells His Story, 1768 A Mid-Atlantic Frontier Delawares and the Quest for Land The Pennsylvania Backcountry The Indians' "Great Awakening" in Pennsylvania Profile Andrew Montour: The Frontier Negotiator Reading History Esther: a Mahican-MoravianMultitribal Zones and Imperial Pressure in the South Trading Slaves and Deerskins Native Americans and the Costs of French Expansion into the Lower Mississippi Valley Tuscarora and Yamasee Wars and Breaking with the British Profile Mary Musgrove: A Creek Woman Between Worlds The Seven Years' War and Indian Perspectives on Empire The Redefinition of Empire and Racial Consciousness Seeing History Neolin's Master of Life Conclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History OnlineChapter 6: The Indians' Revolution, 1763-1814 A Disease, a Continent, and a Revolution The American Revolution Questions of Iroquois Neutrality For Liberty and Independence: New England Indians Profile Molly Brant, an Iroquois Woman and British Loyalist Dunmore's War and the Old NorthwestThe South and Choosing SidesSeeing History A Draught of the Cherokee Country by Lientenant Henry Timberlake, 1762 Native American Recovery, Native American Resistance, 1783-1814The Revolution Continues: Treaties and Bloody Years The Civilization Program Prophets and War Profile Black Hoof, Shawnee Annuity Chief Reading History Hansome Lake's First Vision, 1799 Profile Hillis Hadjo, The Creek Prophet Western RevolutionsThe Borderlands Revolution: Comancheria Comancheria: Wealth and Empire Alta California: Missionary Revolutions Mission Life Profile Indian Leaders in the Franciscan MissionsConclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History Online Chapter 7: Removal, 1801-1846 Do You Want Our Land? Southern Removal Cherokee "Civilization" Cherokees Challenged Reading History The Removal Act of 1830 Cherokee Removal The Creek Road to Oklahoma Choctaw Removal Seeing History Nanih Waiya Chickasaws Head West Profile Pushmataha, Choctaw Leader Caught between Worlds Resisting RemovalSeminoles Fight Profile Coacoochee, the Mexican Seminole The Black Hawk War Reading History Black Hawk's Autobiography Removal from the NorthProfile William Apess, a Pequot Helps the Mashpee Restoring Sovereignty in the Indian Territory Rebuilding the Cherokee Nation Resurgence among Indians from the South Indian Territory and the "Peculiar Institution" of Slavery Conclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History Online Chapter 8: Western Indians and the United States, 1800-1850 Winning or Losing the WestNative Americans, the Corps of Discovery, and Constructing EmpireThe Plains and Missouri River Indians Pacific Northwest Indians Reading History James P. Rhonda, The Truth About Sacagawea The Pacific as the West Russian America Tlingit Culture, Resistance, and Competition Rocky Mountain Fur Trading and the Pacific Northwest Profile Smohalla, the Prophet Winning or Losing the West? The Transformation of California Reading History Isadora: Widow of the Prince of SolanoCalifornia Indians and American Manifest Destiny California's "Sexual Frontier" ProfileIshi, the Last Yahi Standing Texas Indians in Upheaval Profile Andele, the Mexican-Kiowa Captive The Southwest Borderlands in Transition Reading History Andele's Account Conclusion Review Questions Recommended Readings Native American History Online Appendix Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts Bibliography Photo & Text Credits Index



