Webs of Kinship: Family in Northern Cheyenne Nationhood (New Directions in Native American Studies Series)

Description


Many stories that non-Natives tell about Native people emphasize human suffering, the inevitability of loss, and eventual extinction, whether physical or cultural. But the stories Northern Cheyennes tell about themselves emphasize survival, connectedness, and commitment to land and community. In writing Webs of Kinship, anthropologist Christina Gish Hill has worked with government records and other historical documents, in addition to the oral testimonies of these days’s Northern Cheyennes, to emphasize the ties of circle of relatives, reasonably than the ambitions of individual leaders, as the central impetus in the back of the nation’s efforts to establish a reservation in its Tongue River native land.

Hill makes a speciality of the people who lived alongside notable Cheyennes such as Dull Knife, Little Wolf, Little Chief, and Two Moons to reveal the central role of kinship in the Cheyennes’ navigation of U.S. colonial policy all over removal and the early reservation period. As one in every of Hill’s Cheyenne correspondents reminded her, Dull Knife had a circle of relatives, just as all of us do. He and other Cheyenne leaders made decisions with their entire extended families in mind—not just those living, but those who came before and those yet to be born. Webs of Kinship demonstrates that the Cheyennes used kinship ties strategically to safe resources, escape the U.S. military, and establish alliances that in turn aided their efforts to remain a nation in their northern native land.

By reexamining the most tumultuous moments of Northern Cheyenne removal, this book illustrates how the power of kinship has safeguarded the nation’s political autonomy even in the face of U.S. encroachment, allowing the Cheyennes to shape their own story.

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