Cherokee Editor

Cherokee Editor
Author: Elias Boudinot
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 258
Release: 1996
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0820318094

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This volume collects most of the writings published by the accomplished Cherokee leader Elias Boudinot, founding editor of the "Cherokee Phoenix". Mentions: Moravians, Spring Place, GA and missions.

Cherokee Editor, the Writings of Elias Boudinot

Cherokee Editor, the Writings of Elias Boudinot
Author: Elias Boudinot
Publisher:
Total Pages: 243
Release: 1983
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780870493669

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This volume collects most of the writings published by the accomplished Cherokee leader Elias Boudinot (1804?-1839). Founding editor of the "Cherokee Phoenix," Boudinot is the most ambiguous and puzzling figure in Cherokee history. Although he first struggled against the removal of his people from their native Southeast, Boudinot later reversed his position and signed the Treaty of New Echota, an action that cost him his life. Together with Theda Perdue's biographical introduction and in-depth annotations, these letters, articles, pamphlets, and editorials document the stages of Boudinot's religious, philosophical, and political growth, from his early optimism that the Cherokees could completely assimilate into white society to his call for a separate nation of "civilized" Cherokees.

John Ross, Cherokee Chief

John Ross, Cherokee Chief
Author: Gary E. Moulton
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 297
Release: 1978-10-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0820323675

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Recounts the life of Chief John Ross of the Cherokees using Ross' personal papers and Cherokee archives as sources.

Cherokee Editor

Cherokee Editor
Author: Barbara Francine Luebke
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014-03-24
Genre: Cherokee Indians
ISBN: 9781491075326

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The story of American journalism includes many men and women who history, for the most part, overlooks. One such man is the Cherokee who guided the development of the first Indian newspaper and edited it during its early years. Educated by missionaries in the Cherokee Nation and New England, Elias Boudinot was no ordinary Cherokee and no ordinary editor. His life story is intertwined with his people's as they progressed into the 19th century. Part biography and part history, Cherokee Editor draws extensively on the pages of the Cherokee Phoenix to tell its story in Boudinot's own words. Aimed at young-adult readers in particular, it is a story with 21st century themes, including racism, political feuds, government heavy-handedness, a controversial Supreme Court ruling and assassinations.

To Marry an Indian

To Marry an Indian
Author: Theresa Strouth Gaul
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2006-03-08
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0807876356

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When nineteen-year-old Harriett Gold, from a prominent white family in Cornwall, Connecticut, announced in 1825 her intention to marry a Cherokee man, her shocked family initiated a spirited correspondence debating her decision to marry an Indian. Eventually, Gold's family members reconciled themselves to her wishes, and she married Elias Boudinot in 1826. After the marriage, she returned with Boudinot to the Cherokee Nation, where he went on to become a controversial political figure and editor of the first Native American newspaper. Providing rare firsthand documentation of race relations in the early nineteenth-century United States, this volume collects the Gold family correspondence during the engagement period as well as letters the young couple sent to the family describing their experiences in New Echota (capital of the Cherokee Nation) during the years prior to the Cherokee Removal. In an introduction providing historical and social contexts, Theresa Strouth Gaul offers a literary reading of the correspondence, highlighting the value of the epistolary form and the gender and racial dynamics of the exchange. As Gaul demonstrates, the correspondence provides a factual accompaniment to the many fictionalized accounts of contacts between Native Americans and Euroamericans and supports an increasing recognition that letters form an important category of literature.

Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic

Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic
Author: William G. McLoughlin
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 505
Release: 2018-06-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 0691186480

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The Cherokees, the most important tribe in the formative years of the American Republic, became the test case for the Founding Fathers' determination to Christianize and "civilize" all Indians and to incorporate them into the republic as full citizens. From the standpoint of the Cherokees, rather than from that of the white policymakers, William McLoughlin tells the dramatic success story of the "renascence" of the tribe. He goes on to give a full account of how the Cherokees eventually fell before the expansionism of white America and the zeal of Andrew Jackson.

That the People Might Live

That the People Might Live
Author: Jace Weaver
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 257
Release: 1997-12-18
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0195344219

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Loyalty to the community is the highest value in Native American cultures, argues Jace Weaver. In That the People Might Live, he explores a wide range of Native American literature from 1768 to the present, taking this sense of community as both a starting point and a lens. Weaver considers some of the best known Native American writers, such as Leslie Marmon Silko, Gerald Vizenor, and Vine Deloria, as well as many others who are receiving critical attention here for the first time. He contends that the single thing that most defines these authors' writings, and makes them deserving of study as a literature separate from the national literature of the United States, is their commitment to Native community and its survival. He terms this commitment "communitism"--a fusion of "community" and "activism." The Native American authors are engaged in an ongoing quest for community and write out of a passionate commitment to it. They write, literally, "that the People might live." Drawing upon the best Native and non-Native scholarship (including the emerging postcolonial discourse), as well as a close reading of the writings themselves, Weaver adds his own provocative insights to help readers to a richer understanding of these too often neglected texts. A scholar of religion, he also sets this literature in the context of Native cultures and religious traditions, and explores the tensions between these traditions and Christianity.

The Legal Ideology of Removal

The Legal Ideology of Removal
Author: Tim Alan Garrison
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2009
Genre: Law
ISBN: 0820334170

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This study is the first to show how state courts enabled the mass expulsion of Native Americans from their southern homelands in the 1830s. Our understanding of that infamous period, argues Tim Alan Garrison, is too often molded around the towering personalities of the Indian removal debate, including President Andrew Jackson, Cherokee leader John Ross, and United States Supreme Court Justice John Marshall. This common view minimizes the impact on Indian sovereignty of some little-known legal cases at the state level. Because the federal government upheld Native American self-dominion, southerners bent on expropriating Indian land sought a legal toehold through state supreme court decisions. As Garrison discusses Georgia v. Tassels (1830), Caldwell v. Alabama (1831), Tennessee v. Forman (1835), and other cases, he shows how proremoval partisans exploited regional sympathies. By casting removal as a states' rights, rather than a moral, issue, they won the wide support of a land-hungry southern populace. The disastrous consequences to Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Seminoles are still unfolding. Important in its own right, jurisprudence on Indian matters in the antebellum South also complements the legal corpus on slavery. Readers will gain a broader perspective on the racial views of the southern legal elite, and on the logical inconsistencies of southern law and politics in the conceptual period of the anti-Indian and proslavery ideologies.