Product Description
A center of the lucrative fur trade throughout the colonial period, the Great Lakes region was an important site of cultural as well as economic exchange between native and European peoples. In this well-researched study, Susan Sleeper-Smith focuses on an often overlooked aspect of these interactions―the role played by Indian women who married French traders.Drawing on a broad range of primary and secondary sources, she shows how these women used a variety of means to negotiate a middle ground between two disparate cultures. Many were converts to Catholicism who constructed elaborate mixed-blood kinship networks that paralleled those of native society, thus facilitating the integration of Indian and French values. By the mid-eighteenth century, native women had extended these kin linkages to fur trade communities throughout the Great Lakes, not only enhancing access to the region's highly prized pelts but also ensuring safe transport for other goods.
Indian Women and French Men depicts the encounter of Old World and New as an extended process of indigenous adaptation and change rather than one of conflict and inevitable demise. By serving as brokers between those two worlds, Indian women who married French men helped connect the Great Lakes to a larger, expanding transatlantic economy while securing the survival of their own native culture. As such, Sleeper-Smith points out, their experiences illuminate those of other traditional cultures forced to adapt to market-motivated Europeans.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Many Tender Ties: Women in Fur-Trade Society, 1670–1870
- Strangers in Blood: Fur Trade Company Families in Indian Country
- Michigan: A History of Explorers, Entrepreneurs, and Everyday People
- Michigan's Lumbertowns: Lumbermen and Laborers in Saginaw, Bay City, and Muskegon, 1870-1905 (Great Lakes Books Series)
- Songs Upon the Rivers: The Buried History of the French-Speaking Canadiens and Métis from the Great Lakes and the Mississippi across to the Pacific
- New Peoples: Being & Becoming Métis in North America (Manitoba Studies in Native History, Book 1)
- Michigan: A History of the Great Lakes State
- The Dodge Brothers: The Men, the Motor Cars, and the Legacy (Great Lakes Books Series)
- Michigan Voices: Our State’s History in the Words of the People Who Lived It (Great Lakes Books Series)
- The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815 (Studies in North American Indian History)
*If this is not the "
Indian Women and French Men: Rethinking Cultural Encounter in the Western Great Lakes (Native Americ" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by
clicking this link.
Details were last updated on Dec 17, 2024 22:27 +08.