"This is an excellent collection of essays with a common foundation of recent scholarship and shared geographic and temporal limitations."—S.J. Blackstone, <i>Choice</i>
The authors' careful and imaginative analysis of historical documents and performative traditions reveals an intricate history of intercultural exchange. In sum, Native Acts challenges any simple understanding of cultural "authenticity" even as it celebrates the dynamic role of performance in the American Indian pursuit of self-determination. In this collection, Indian peoples emerge as active, vocal, embodied participants in cultural encounters whose performance powerfully shaped the course of early American history.
Introduction
Laura L. Mielke
1. Lying Inventions: Native Dissimulation in Early Colonial New England
Matt Cohen
2. The Deer Island Indians and Common Law Performance
Nan Goodman
3. Native Performances of Diplomacy and Religion in Early New France
John H. Pollack
4. Wendat Song and Carnival Noise in the Jesuit Relations
Olivia Bloechl
5. "I Wunnatuckquannum, This Is My Hand": Native Performance in Massachusett Language Indian Deeds
Stephanie Fitzgerald
6. In a Red Petticoat: Coosaponakeesa's Performance of Creek Sovereignty in Colonial Georgia
Caroline Wigginton
7. Playing John White: John Wompas and Racial Identity in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World
Jenny Hale Pulsipher
8. "This Wretched Scene of British Curiosity and Savage Debauchery": Performing Indian Kingship in Eighteenth-Century Britain 000
Timothy J. Shannon
9. Performing Indian Publics: Two Native Views of Diplomacy to the Western Nations in 1792
Phillip H. Round
10. Editing as Indian Performance: Elias Boudinot, Poetry, and the Cherokee Phoenix
Theresa Strouth Gaul
Afterword
Philip J. Deloria
Contributors
Index