Wide open spaces: place, empire, and U.S.-indigenous relations, 1816-1907
[摘要] Wide Open Spaces: Place, Empire, and U.S.-Indigenous Relations, 1816-1907 investigates the changing borders of the U.S. settler nation-state and Native nations throughout the nineteenth century. The project looks at three key sites, Florida, Cuba, and Oklahoma, to unpack how statehood debates challenged the U.S. to determine who and what to include within its borders. Print culture narrated these moments of particular geopolitical and cultural flux and operated (often on both sides of the colonial divide) to establish a narrative cartography of place.
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[效力级别] American Studies [学科分类]
[关键词] Literature;American Studies;Native American Studies;Native American Literature;Nineteenth-Century American Literature;U.S. Print Culture;U.S. Empire;Statehood;Florida;Cuba;Kansas;Oklahoma [时效性]