| International Standard Book Number |
9781324094951 (hardcover)
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| International Standard Book Number |
1324094958 (hardcover)
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| Personal Name |
Fisher, Linford D., author.
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| Title Statement |
Stealing America : the hidden story of Indigenous slavery in US history / Linford D. Fisher.
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| Edition Statement |
First edition.
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| Production, Publication, Distribution, Manufacture, and Copyright Notice |
New York, NY : Liveright Publishing Corporation, a division of W.W. Norton & Company, 2026.
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| Physical Description |
xvii, 537 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm.
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| Bibliography, Etc. Note |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 443-506) and index.
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| Formatted Contents Note |
Prologue : stealing Indigenous people and land -- Part one : Rise (1492-1650). Colonial templates -- American slavery -- Thin justifications -- Part two : Expansion (1650-1750). The erased Caribbean trade -- Forced diasporas -- Resistance in the southeast -- The Miskitu trade -- Part three : Transitions (1750-1820). Everyday opportunism -- A king's proclamation -- Revolutionary rage contre-indienne -- A surge of freedom -- Part four : Resurgence (1820-1880). Removals and plantations -- A new American slavery -- Paradoxical civil wars -- Abolishing peonage -- Part five : Transformations (1880-1978). The primer and the hoe -- Lost sparrows and self-determination -- Epilogue : forgetting and remembering.
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| Summary, Etc. |
"Decades in the making, Linford Fisher's Stealing America is the first comprehensive history of indigenous slavery in North America. While there have been regional and state histories of indigenous slave history, Fisher's book examines the practice of European enslavement of native people in its entirety from the late sixteenth century well into the twentieth century. Initially a Ph.D. student under Jill Lepore and now a tenured professor at Brown, Fisher presents a dramatic and sweeping narrative, demonstrating how indigenous enslavement was a massive phenomenon that spanned the entire Americas and ensnared between 2.5 and 5 million Native Americans between 1492 and 1900. After the defeat of the Spanish Armada, an unparalleled frenzy of explorers usurped native land, stealing hundreds of thousands of indigenous people in the process. From New England to Texas to California, colonizers enslaved Native people and disguised the act, treating them as Black slaves, in order to avoid detection since the enslavement of Natives was a source of shame to the English and later made illegal. Native slavery would then be covertly merged with Black slavery, the two populations being counted under one rubric. In fact, this use of Native slavery precedes Black slavery and 1619 by over 40 years, effectively rewriting American history at its origins. As Fisher re-narrates early America, Native slavery makes appearances in ways we had no idea, whether in the post-1804 Louisiana Purchase; at Sutter's Mill, where hundreds if not thousands of native slaves were used to "discover" gold; or in the forced adoptions and in "Indian" schools well into the twentieth century. With Stealing America, Fisher has created a sprawling, potentially prize-winning masterpiece that will certainly establish him as one of our leading American historians"-- Provided by publisher.
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Indians, Treatment of History. North America
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Slavery History. United States
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Slave trade History. United States
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Enslaved Indians History. North America
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Enslaved Indians History. United States
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Slavery History. North America
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Indians, Treatment of History. United States
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| Subject Added Entry - Topical Term |
Slave trade History. North America
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| Index Term-Genre/Form |
Informational works.
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