Appeals to Civilization and Customary "Forest Diplomacy": Arguments against Removal in Letters Written by the Iroquois, 1830-1857

Letter writers argued that, contrary to the reasoning being used to justify displacing them from their homelands, they had made significant progress in the areas of education, culture, and morality, and could only continue to develop if located in close proximity to settler society. At the same time, they used conventions and language which referenced their relations with Europeans in the colonial era.
Author/Creator
Claudia B. Haake
Open Access
No
Primary Source
No
Citation
Wicazo Sa Review, vol. 30, no. 2, Fall, 2015, pp. 100-128
Publication Date
2015
Location
Resource Type
Articles -- Scholarly, peer reviewed
Format
Text -- PDF
Text -- HTML
Language
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