What We Are Reading Today: Indigenous Continent; The Epic Contest for North America

What We Are Reading Today: Indigenous Continent; The Epic Contest for North America
Short Url
Updated 11 October 2022
Follow

What We Are Reading Today: Indigenous Continent; The Epic Contest for North America

What We Are Reading Today: Indigenous Continent; The Epic Contest for North America

In “Indigenous Continent,” acclaimed historian Pekka Hämäläinen presents a sweeping counternarrative that shatters the most basic assumptions about American history.

Shifting our perspective away from Jamestown, Plymouth Rock, the Revolution, and other well-trodden episodes on the conventional timeline, he depicts a sovereign world of Native nations whose members, far from helpless victims of colonial violence, dominated the continent for centuries after the first European arrivals.

From the Iroquois in the northeast to the Comanches on the Plains, and from the Pueblos in the southwest to the Cherokees in the southeast, Native nations frequently decimated white newcomers in battle. Even as the white population exploded and colonists’ land greed grew more extravagant, Indigenous peoples flourished due to sophisticated diplomacy and leadership structures.

Hämäläinen ultimately contends that the very notion of “colonial America” is misleading, and that we should speak instead of an “Indigenous America” that was only slowly and unevenly becoming colonial.

The evidence of Indigenous defiance is apparent today in the hundreds of Native nations that still dot the US and Canada.