- Louisiana State University Press
Native American Women and the Burdens of Southern History
Key Metrics
- Daniel H Usner
- Louisiana State University Press
- Hardcover
- 9780807179918
- -
- -
- History > Indigenous Peoples of the Americas
- English
Book Description
Though long neglected, the history and experiences of Indigenous women offer a deeper, more complex understanding of southern history and culture. In Native American Women and the Burdens of Southern History, Daniel H. Usner explores the dynamic role of Native American women in the South as they confronted waves of colonization, European imperial invasion, plantation encroachment, and post-Civil War racialization. In the process, he reveals the distinct form their means of adaptation and resistance took.
While drawing attention to existing scholarship on Native American women, Usner also uses original research and diverse sources, including visual images and material culture, to advance a new line of inquiry. Focusing on women's responses and initiatives across centuries, he shows how their agency shaped and reshaped their communities' relations with non-Native southerners. Exploring basketry in the Lower Mississippi Valley and Gulf Coastal South, Usner emphasizes the essential role women played in ongoing efforts at resistance and survival, even in the face of epidemics, violence, and enslavement unleashed by early colonizers. Foods and medicines that Native women gathered, carried, stored, and peddled in baskets proved integral in forming the region's frontier exchange economy. Later, as the plantation economy threatened to envelop their communities, Indigenous women adapted to change and resisted disappearance by perpetuating exchange with non-Native neighbors and preserving a deep attachment to the land. By the start of the twentieth century, facing a new round of lethal attacks on Indigenous territory, identity, and sovereignty in the Jim Crow South, Native women's resilient and resourceful skill as makers of basketry became a crucial instrument in their nations' political diplomacy.
Overall, Usner's work underscores how central Indigenous women have been in struggles for Native American territory and sovereignty throughout southern history.
Author Bio
Daniel Usner is the author of Indians, Settlers, and Slaves in a Frontier Exchange Economy: The Lower Mississippi Valley before 1783 (University of North Carolina Press, 1992), which won the Jamestown Prize from the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and the John H. Dunning Prize from the American Historical Association. His other books are American Indians in the Lower Mississippi Valley: Social and Economic Histories (University of Nebraska Press, 1998), Indian Work: Language and Livelihood in American History (Harvard University Press, 2009), and Weaving Alliances with Other Women: Chitimacha Indian Work in the New South (University of Georgia Press, 2015), and American Indians in Early New Orleans: From Calumet to Raquette (Louisiana State University Press, 2018).
Usner has devoted much of his scholarship to imperial borderlands and Native homelands in early American history, focusing on intercultural exchange in colonial Louisiana and the Lower Mississippi Valley. His most recent work attends to the complicated relationship between the consumption of Indigenous culture and the production of Indigenous identity, attempting to rescue the intricacy of economic adaptations from ideological mis-representations of Native American livelihood.
Usner’s current book-length project explores how Native American women mobilized arts and crafts on behalf of their people’s sovereignty and territory, studying up-close the Chitimacha Indians of south Louisiana from the Civil War to the New Deal. This work spans a wide range of fields—particularly Native American history, women’s history, art history, material culture, and history of social science. Recent articles derived from this research are “From Bayou Teche to Fifth Avenue: Crafting a New Market for Chitimacha Indian Baskets,” Journal of Southern History 79 (May 2013), 339-74; "Weaving Material Objects and Political Alliances: The Chitimacha Indian Pursuit of Federal Recognition," Native American and Indigenous Studies 1 (Spring 2014), 25-48; and “’They Don’t Like Indian Around Here’: Chitimacha Struggles and Strategies for Survival in the Jim Crow South,” Native South 9(2016), 89-124.
Daniel Usner has received fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies, the Cornell University Society for the Humanities, the Bard Graduate Center for Decorative Arts, Design History, and Material Culture, the Council for International Exchange of Scholars, the Huntington Library, the Newberry Library, the School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe, Vanderbilt University's Robert Penn Warren Center, and Vanderbilt University's Office of the Vice Provost for Research. Before joining the Vanderbilt faculty in 2002, Usner taught for two decades at Cornell University, where he received a Russell Distinguished Teaching Award and also served as Director of its American Indian Program in 1999-2002. He chaired Vanderbilt's history department from 2004 to 2007.
Usner has served on the councils of the American Society for Ethnohistory and the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. He was president of the American Society for Ethnohistory in 2010-11 and presently sits on the Southern Historical Association’s Executive Council and the Louisiana Historical Association’s Board of Directors. He has been selected to present the Walter Lynwood Fleming Lectures in Southern History at Louisiana State University in 2022.
Daniel Usner teaches graduate and undergraduate courses on American Indians since 1500, comparative imperial borderlands, North American colonies, the U.S. early republic, American Indian environmental history, and the history and culture of New Orleans.
Source: Vanderbilt University
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