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NATIVE AMERICAN WOMAN ACROSS TIME
Pocahontas and the Powhatan Dilemma. By Camilla Townsend.
New York: Hill & Wang, 2004. xi + 223 pp. Photographs, illustrations,
notes, and index. $25.00 (cloth); $14.00 (paper).
A Necessary Balance: Gender and Power among Indians of the Columbia
Plateau. By Lillian A. Ackerman. Norman: University of Oklahoma
Press, 2003. xiv + 282 pp. Maps, photographs, tables, bibliography, and
index. $42.95 (cloth).
Cherokee Women in Crisis: Trail of Tears, Civil War, and Allotment,
1838–1907. By Carolyn Ross Johnston. Tuscaloosa: University
of Alabama Press, 2003. xiv + 227 pp. Photographs, notes, bibliography,
and index. $53.00 (cloth); $29.95 (paper).
Choctaw Women in a Chaotic World. By Michelene Pesantubbee.
Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2005. xi + 208 pp. Maps,
illustrations, notes, bibliography, and index. $39.95 (cloth); $21.95
(paper).
Katherine M. B. Osburn
Tennessee Technological University
A decade ago historian Nancy
Shoemaker opened her collection of articles on native women's history,
Negotiators of Change, with an anecdote about a colleague's response to
her project. "Why do we need a book in Indian women's history," he remarked,
"There already is one." Since this ill-conceived remark, the study of
Indian women's lives has produced an exceptional body of scholarship.
These four new works continue this tradition, reflecting several themes
that have developed within the genre: the issue of women's status and
power before and after contact with Europeans, the specific cultural and
historical forces shaping construction of gender roles, and issues of
the representation of Indian women. Moreover, perhaps the most noteworthy
change in the field of Indian women's history over the last decade is
the broadening of the category of gender analysis to include an assessment
of male gender roles; each of these works incorporates this approach.
Taken together, these four monographs are reason to celebrate continued
excellence in the scholarship of the field.
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