Indigenous Cultures

2004 Annual Seminar

 

Tuesday, August 3

SESSION 1:

Natives on the Margins: The Northeast

Chair: Colin Calloway, Dartmouth College

 Andrew Miller, Johns Hopkins University

“Abenaki-European Relations before 1725: Adaptation, Persistence, or Evolution?”

 Daniel R. Mandell, Truman State University

“Indians in Eighteenth-Century Anglo-America: Indigenous Peoples and Racial Proletariat”

SESSION 2

 Persistence, Slavery, and Gifts in the Southeast

Chair: Colin Calloway, Dartmouth College

 Denise Ileana Bossy, Yale University

“‘A White Eagle Wing and a Yamasee Boy’: Indian Slavery in South Carolina after the Yamasee War, 1721-1732”

 Jessica Ross Stern, Johns Hopkins University

“Gifts in Southeastern American Indian and Anglo-American Exchange”

 

Wednesday, August 4

 SESSION 3

 Myths, Symbols, and Cultural Encounters: Rattlesnakes and Amazons

Chair: Peter Wood, Duke University

 Philip Levy, University of South Florida

“Rattlesnakes and the Competition between Indian and European Fellow Travelers”

 Astrid Steverlynck, Oxford University

“The Women of Matininó: Amazons, Exchange, and the Origins of Society”

 

SESSION 4

 Plenary Session

 Peter Wood, Duke University

“Atlantic History on Canvas: A Fresh Look at Winslow Homer's The Gulf Stream

 

 Thursday, August 5

 SESSION 5

 Mexico: Survival and Persistence

Chair: R. Douglas Cope, Brown University

 Andrew B. Fisher, Carleton College

“Primordial Identities Imagined and Contested: Peasant Communities and Memory in the Eighteenth-Century Hot Country of Guerrero, Mexico”

 Edward Osowski, St. Michael's College

“Underneath Triumphal Arches: Eighteenth-Century Indigenous Survival in New Spain's Urban Core”

 

 Friday, August 6

 SESSION 6

 Resistance, Negotiation, and Continuity in Mesoamerica

Chair: R. Douglas Cope, Brown University

 Leonardo Hernandez, SUNY—Oswego

“The Periphery of the Periphery: Pre-Atlantic and Atlantic History as Seen from Southeastern Mesoamerica”

 Irene Vasquez, University of California at Los Angeles

“From Indigenous to Native Others: The Changing Constructs of Hijos de la Frontera in Eighteenth-Century Northern Mexico”

 

SESSION 7

 The Church as Cultural Negotiator: Jesuits and the Inquisition

Chair: Susan Kellogg, University of Houston

 José Gabriel Martínez-Serna, Southern Methodist University

“Instruments of Empire: Jesuit-Indian Encounters in the New World Borderlands”

 Patricia Lopes Don, San José State University

“Death of an Aztec: The Inquisition of the Native Leader Don Carlos of Texcoco in Early Mexico, 1539”

 

 Saturday, August 7

 SESSION 8

 Courts and Law: Uses and Re-Uses

Chair: Susan Kellogg, University of Houston

 R. Jovita Baber, University of Chicago

“Vexatious Outsiders: The Shaping of Colonial Spaces in Tlaxcala, New Spain, 1550-1590”

 Carmen Alveal, Johns Hopkins University

“Land, Politics, and Society in Colonial Brazil: A Native Perspective”

 

 Monday, August 9

 SESSION 9

 Appearance and Disappearance in Trinidad and the Danish Caribbean

Chair: David Barry Gaspar, Duke University

 Gunvor Simonsen, European University Institute

“African and African-Caribbean Voices in the Lower Courts of the Danish West Indies”

 Maximilian C. Forte, University College of Cape Breton

“Writing the Caribs Out: The Construction and Demystification of the ‘Deserted Island’ Thesis for Trinidad”

 

SESSION 10

 The Portuguese in Nigeria and Brazil: Languages and Cultures

Chair: Joseph C. Miller, University of Virginia

 David Aworawo, University of Lagos

“Cultural Atavism and Adaptation: The Varying Responses to Western Culture in Benin and Warri, 1520”

 Kittiya Lee, Johns Hopkins University

“Among the Vulgar, the Erudite, and the Sacred: The Oral Life of Colonial Amazonia”

 

 Tuesday, August 10

 SESSION 11

 Accommodation and Continuity in the Illinois Country and the Eastern Great Lakes: Prehistory, Cross-Cultural Alliances, and Marriage

Chair: Eric Hinderaker, University of Utah

 Alan G. Shackelford, Hendrix College

“Navigating the Opportunities of New Worlds: The Land of the Illinois in Prehistory, Protohistory, and History”

 Heidi Bohaker, University of Toronto

“Contesting the Middle Ground: The Dynamic Tradition of Indigenous Kinship Networks and Cross-Cultural Alliances in North America's Eastern Great Lakes Region, 1600-1700”

 Sophie White, University of Notre Dame

“‘Dressed in the French Manner’: Illiniwek Wives of Frenchmen in the Illinois Country during the French Regime”