Professional Documents
Culture Documents
2022 Spring Trade Catalog Final-Web - Linked
2022 Spring Trade Catalog Final-Web - Linked
AWARD-WINNING BOOKS
★ Congratulations to our Recent Award Winners
★ 2020 Distinguished ★ 2021 Ramirez Family Award for ★ 2021 SPUR Award First ★ 2021 Oklahoma Book Awards,
Writing Award Most Significant Scholarly Book Nonfiction Book Design/Illustration Category
Army Historical Foundation Texas Institute of Letters Western Writers of America Oklahoma Center for the Book
★ 2021 Gita Chaudhuri Prize
COURAGE ABOVE ALL THINGS WAR AND PEACE ON THE RIO Western Association of Women Historians RENEGADES
General John Ellis Wool and the GRANDE FRONTIER, 1830–1880 Bruce Goff and the American
U.S. Military, 1812–1863 By Miguel Ángel González-Quiroga RACE AND THE WILD WEST School of Architecture
By Harwood P. Hinton and $50.00 Hardcover Sarah Bickford, the Montana Vigilantes, Edited by Luca Guido, Stephanie
Jerry Thompson 978-0-8061-6498-4 and the Tourism of Decline, 1870–1930 Pilat, and Angela Person
$45.00 Hardcover By Laura J. Arata Designed by Tony Roberts
978-0-8061-6724-4 $24.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-6497-7 $50.00 Paperback 978-0-8061-6460-1
★ Oklahoma Book of the Year ★ 2021 Best Nonfiction Book ★ Ladislaus J. Bolchazy ★ 2021 Al Lowman Memorial Prize
Oklahoma Historical Society Western Heritage Awards Pedagogy Book Award Texas State Historical Association
★ 2021 Oklahoma Book Awards, Classical Association of the
Non-Fiction Category SAND CREEK AND THE TRAGIC Middle West and South MURDER IN MONTAGUE
Oklahoma Center for the Book END OF A LIFEWAY Frontier Justice and Retribution in Texas
By Louis Kraft THE PSYCHOMACHIA By Glen Sample Ely
BREAKING DOWN BARRIERS $34.95 Hardcover OF PRUDENTIUS $21.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-6709-1
George McLaurin and the Struggle 978-0-8061-6483-0 Text, Commentary, and Glossary
to End Segregated Education By Aaron Pelttari
By David W. Levy $29.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-6402-1
$24.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-6722-0
v
On the cover: Detail of cover illustration
for “Dude Ranches Out West,” railroad
CONNECT WITH US tourist brochure from 1931. Courtesy
of the Union Pacific Railroad Museum,
Council Bluffs, Iowa.
ORDER ONLINE AT OUPRESS.COM OR CALL 80 0-848-6224 EX T. 1 1
companies like Levi Strauss & Co. replicated the films’ western styles, and
novelists Zane Grey and Mary Roberts Rinehart moved dude ranching into MARCH
Lynn Downey is an independent writer, archivist, and historian. She is the By W. Hudson Kensel
$29.95x Hardcover 978-0-87062-384-4
author of Arequipa Sanatorium: Life in California’s Lung Resort for Women and the
LIFE IN A CORNER
debut novel Dudes Rush In. Cultural Episodes in Southeastern Utah, 1880–1950
By Robert S. McPherson
$24.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4691-1
ten-year-old triplets who converse with her about dinosaurs and a Connecticut 250 PAGES, 6 × 9
20 B&W ILLUS.
museum where portraits of her ancestors hang on the walls. Through lively
HISTORY/MEMOIR
descriptions of these visits, Hunting advances a view of history as nonlinear
and full of unlikely coincidences.
Of Related Interest
For Want of Wings is also the carefully researched story of the least known of
Yale’s four expeditions into the American West led by eminent paleontologist
O. C. Marsh; the friendship between Russell’s father and abolitionist John
Brown; a portrait of a mother and daughter evolving in self-understanding;
and an inquiry into matters of race in American history and the author’s own
family. In the end, all these pieces converge, like fragments of a fossil, to form
MAKING CIRCLES
an exquisitely patterned work of historical exploration. The Memoir of a Cowboy Journalist
By Barney Nelson
Jill Hunting is the author of Finding Pete: Rediscovering the Brother I Lost in Vietnam. $26.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-6845-6
OFF TRAIL
Finding My Way Home in the Colorado Rockies
By Jane Parnell
$19.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-5900-3
4 NEW BOOKS SPRING/SUMMER 2022
So They Remember
A Jewish Family’s Story of Surviving the Holocaust in Soviet Ukraine
By Maksim Goldenshteyn
When we think of Nazi camps, names such as Auschwitz, Bergen-Belsen,
and Dachau come instantly to mind. Yet the history of the Holocaust extends
beyond those notorious sites. In the former territory of Transnistria, located
in occupied Soviet Ukraine and governed by Nazi Germany’s Romanian allies,
many Jews perished due to disease, starvation, and other horrific conditions.
Through an intimate blending of memoir, history, and reportage, So They
Remember illuminates this oft-overlooked chapter of the Holocaust.
In December 1941, with the German-led invasion of the Soviet Union in its
sixth month, a twelve-year-old Jewish boy named Motl Braverman, along with
family members, was uprooted from his Ukrainian hometown and herded
to the remote village of Pechera, the site of a Romanian death camp. Author
Maksim Goldenshteyn, the grandson of Motl, first learned of his family’s
wartime experiences in 2012. Through tireless research, Goldenshteyn spent
JANUARY years unraveling the story of Motl, his family members, and their fellow
$24.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-7606-2 prisoners. The author here renders their story through the eyes of Motl and
242 PAGES, 6 × 9 other children, who decades later would bear witness to the traumas they
15 B&W ILLUS., 1 MAP
suffered.
BIOGRAPHY/HISTORY
Until now, Romanian historians and survivors have served as almost the only
Of Related Interest chroniclers of the Holocaust in Transnistria. Goldenshteyn’s account, based on
interviews with Soviet-born relatives and other survivors, archival documents,
and memoirs, is among the first full-length books to spotlight the Pechera
camp, ominously known by its prisoners as Mertvaya Petlya, or the “Death
Noose.” Unfortunately, as the author explains, the Pechera camp was only one
of some two hundred concentration sites spread across Transnistria, where
local Ukrainian policemen often conspired with Romanian guards to brutalize
A POLISH DOCTOR IN THE NAZI CAMPS
My Mother’s Memories of Imprisonment, the prisoners.
Immigration, and a Life Remade
By Barbara Rylko-Bauer In March 1944, the Red Army liberated Motl’s family and fellow captives.
$21.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-5191-5 Yet for decades, according to the author, they were silenced by Soviet policies
MORONI AND THE SWASTIKA enacted to erase all memory of Jewish wartime suffering. So They Remember
Mormons in Nazi Germany
By David Conley Nelson
gives voice to this long-repressed history and documents how the events at
$39.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-4668-3 Pechera and other surrounding camps and ghettos continue to shape remaining
$24.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-6575-2
survivors and their descendants.
IN LOVE AND WAR
The World War II Courtship Letters of a Nisei Couple
By Melody M. Miyamoto Walters
Maksim Goldenshteyn studied journalism at the University of Washington
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4820-5 and has written for regional newspapers, including the Seattle Times. He now
works as a publicist.
ORDER ONLINE AT OUPRESS.COM OR CALL 80 0-848-6224 EX T. 1 5
Warrior Spirit
The Story of Native American Heroism and Patriotism
By Herman J. Viola
Foreword by Debra Kay Mooney
Contributions by Ellen Baumler, Cheryl Hughes,
and Michelle Pearson
For decades, American schoolchildren have learned only a smattering of facts
about Native American peoples, especially when it comes to service in the U.S.
military. They might know that Navajos served as Code Talkers during World
War II, but more often they learn that Native Americans were enemies of the
United States, not allies or patriots. In Warrior Spirit, author Herman J. Viola sets
the record straight by highlighting the military service—and major sacrifices—
of Native American soldiers and veterans in the U.S. armed services.
American Indians have fought in uniform in each of our nation’s wars. Since
1775, despite a legacy of broken treaties, cultural suppression, and racial
discrimination, indigenous Americans have continued to serve in numbers MARCH
that far exceed their percentage of the general U.S. population. Warrior Spirit $19.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-8031-1
introduces readers to unsung heroes, from the first Native guides and soldiers 168 PAGES, 6 × 9
52 B&W ILLUS.
during the Revolutionary War to those servicemen and -women who ventured
NATIVE AMERICAN/MILITARY HISTORY
to Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
This outstanding record of service begs a question: Why do American Indians Of Related Interest
willingly serve a country that has treated them so poorly? Native veterans
invariably answer that they are a warrior people who have a sacred obligation
to defend their homeland and their families. Written to be accessible to young
adult readers, Warrior Spirit is a valuable resource for any reader interested in
Native American military history.
Herman J. Viola, Curator Emeritus at the Smithsonian Institution, was the UNDER THE EAGLE
Samuel Holiday, Navajo Code Talker
senior advisor for the National Native American Veterans Memorial, dedicated By Samuel Holiday and Robert S. McPherson
in November 2020. He is the author of numerous articles and pathbreaking $21.95 Paperback 978-0-8061-4389-7
books, including After Columbus: The Chronicle of America’s Indian Peoples since 1492 THE FIRST CODE TALKERS
Native American Communicators in World War I
and Warriors in Uniform. Ellen Baumler has served as an interpretive historian By William C. Meadows
with the Montana Historical Society in Helena and is the author of numerous $36.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6841-8
books and articles on Montana. Cheryl Hughes is retired as a high school OF UNCOMMON BIRTH
Dakota Sons in Vietnam
English teacher in Montana and has taught Native American literature and By Mark St. Pierre
place-based education. Debra Kay Mooney (Choctaw) retired from the U.S. $21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-5345-2
Army a Sergeant First Class in 2015 and lives in Idabel, Oklahoma. Educator
and historic preservationist Michelle Pearson teaches in Adams 12 Five Star
Schools in Thornton, Colorado, and is the author of Historic Places of Denver for
Children and Families.
6 NEW BOOKS SPRING/SUMMER 2022
NEW IN PAPERBACK
Black Spokane
The Civil Rights Struggle in the Inland Northwest
By Dwayne A. Mack
In 1981, decades before mainstream America elected Barack Obama, James
Chase became the first African American mayor of Spokane, Washington, with
the overwhelming support of a majority-white electorate. Chase’s win failed
to capture the attention of historians—as had the century-long evolution of
the black community in Spokane. In Black Spokane: The Civil Rights Struggle in
the Inland Northwest, Dwayne A. Mack corrects this oversight—and recovers a
crucial chapter in the history of race relations and civil rights in America.
As early as the 1880s, Spokane was a destination for black settlers escaping the
racial oppression in the South—settlers who over the following decades built
an infrastructure of churches, businesses, and social organizations to serve the
black community. Drawing on oral histories, interviews, newspapers, and a
VOLUME 8 IN THE RACE AND CULTURE
IN THE AMERICAN WEST SERIES rich array of other primary sources, Mack sets the stage for the years following
World War II in the Inland Northwest, when an influx of black veterans would
JANUARY bring about a new era of racial issues. His book traces the earliest challenges
$26.95x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-4489-4 faced by the NAACP and a small but sympathetic white population as Spokane
$19.95 PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-9005-1 became a significant part of the national civil rights struggle. International
216 PAGES, 6 × 9
superstars such as Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong and Hazel Scott figure in this
22 B&W ILLUS., 1 TABLE
U.S. HISTORY
story, along with charismatic local preachers, entrepreneurs, and lawyers who
stepped forward as civic leaders.
These individuals’ contributions, and the black community’s encounters with
racism, offer a view of the complexity of race relations in a city and a region not
recognized historically as centers of racial strife. But in matters of race—from
the first migration of black settlers to Spokane, through the politics of the Cold
War and the civil rights movement, to the successes of the 1970s and ’80s—
Mack shows that Spokane has a story to tell, one that this book at long last
incorporates into the larger history of twentieth-century America.
Leader of the Santee Sioux, Inkpaduta By Sandra Muse Isaacs Edited by Sibylle M. Schlesier
(1815–79) participated in some of the Foreword by Joyce Dugan As Keeper of the Arrows, William
most decisive battles of the northern Wayne Red Hat Jr. is charged with
Traditional stories embody the
Great Plains, including Custer’s defeat protecting one of the most sacred
Cherokee concepts of Gadugi, working
at Little Bighorn. But the 1857 attack possessions of the Cheyenne people
together for the good of all, and
on forty white settlers, known as the and serves his tribe as a revered
Duyvkta, walking the right path, and
Spirit Lake Massacre, gave Inkpaduta cultural authority. The Arrow Keeper
teach listeners how to understand
the reputation of the most brutal Sioux also oversees and maintains the tribe’s
and live in the world with reverence
leader. spiritual connection to the land. Sibylle
for all living things. Sandra Muse
Inkpaduta: Dakota Leader reexamines Isaacs uses the concepts of Gadugi Schlesier’s father, anthropologist Karl
stereotypes and shatters myths, and Duyvkta to explore the Eastern Schlesier, was an associate of Red
showing this courageous warrior also Cherokee oral tradition, and to explain Hat’s family, and Sibylle recorded
to have been dedicated family man and how storytelling in this tradition is and transcribed this memoir. Red
tribal leader who got along with whites instrumental in the perpetuation of Hat’s descriptions of ceremonies and
for most of his life. Long considered a Cherokee identity and culture. traditions serve to keep them alive.
villain whose passion was murdering
Sandra Muse Isaacs is of Eastern William Wayne Red Hat Jr. aided
white settlers, Inkpaduta is provided
Cherokee descent (Ani-tsisqua, his grandfather Edward Red Hat in
a reassessment of his life in Beck’s
Bird Clan) and Gaelic heritage (Clan his duties as Keeper of the Arrows. In
thorough biography.
MacRae). She is Assistant Professor 1993, Red Hat himself became Arrow
Paul N. Beck is Professor of History of Indigenous Literature and English Keeper. He now lives with his wife,
at Wisconsin Lutheran College, Language and Literature at the Nellie, and their extended family
Milwaukee, and author of The First University of Windsor. near Longdale, Oklahoma. Sibylle M.
Sioux War: The Grattan Fight and Blue Schlesier teaches German and is Chair
of the World Languages Department at
BECK INKPADUTA
Diplomacy Shot Down The Fall of a Black General Crook and the
The U-2 Crisis and Eisenhower’s Aborted Army Officer Western Frontier
Mission to Moscow, 1959–1960 Racism and the Myth of Henry O. Flipper By Charles M. Robinson III
ROBINSON THE FALL OF A BLACK ARMY OFFICER
By E. Bruce Geelhoed By Charles M. Robinson III General George Crook was one of the
In August 1959, President Dwight D. Lieutenant Henry O. Flipper, a most prominent soldiers in the frontier
Eisenhower announced he and Soviet former slave, became the first Black West. General William T. Sherman
premier Nikita S. Khrushchev would graduate of West Point. While called him the greatest Indian fighter
visit each other’s countries as a means of serving as commissary officer at the army ever had. Yet, on hearing
“thawing” the Cold War. Khrushchev’s Fort Davis, Texas, in 1881, he was of Crook’s death, the Sioux chief Red
1959 trip to the United States resulted in charged with embezzlement and Cloud lamented, “He, at least, never lied
plans for a summit with Great Britain conduct unbecoming an officer. A to us.”
and France and Eisenhower’s 1960 visit court-martial board acquitted Flipper Crook’s career began with successful
to Russia. of embezzlement but convicted him campaigns against the Apaches,
of conduct unbecoming, and he was resulting in his promotion to brigadier
But in May 1960, the Soviet Union shot
dismissed from the army. Flipper’s case general, but his campaign against
down an American U-2 surveillance
became emblematic of racism in the the Lakota and Cheyennes was less
plane piloted by Francis Gary Powers.
frontier army, and many assumed he successful, displaying his insight,
The summit’s collapse and the
had been railroaded. egotism, and fear. This biography
cancelation of Eisenhower’s trip marked
a missed opportunity for improved In this revision of his book The Fall of a of illuminates General Crook’s life,
relations that could have led to a détente Black Army Officer, Robinson finds that military career, and his efforts to
in the U.S.-Soviet relationship. Flipper authored his own problems. provide rights for American Indians.
This thorough reassessment reveals the
E. Bruce Geelhoed, Professor of History truth. Charles M. Robinson III authored
at Ball State University, is coauthor (with A Good Year to Die: The Story of the Great
Sioux War and The Fall of a Black Army
GEELHOED DIPLOMACY SHOT DOWN
asks animal historian Susan Nance. For Americans, raising boys right was
Bill’s Wild West show at Madison This book explores how rodeo reflects a pivotal step in securing the nation’s
Square Garden in 1910, Princeton western beliefs and assumptions that future. Frontiers of Boyhood explores the
student Irving H. “Larry” Larom have led to environmental crises. ramifications of this myth through
determined to live his life in the West. Rodeo reclaims the history of roping western history, childhood studies,
That year, Larom made his first trip to steers, calves, broncs, and bulls, who and a rich cultural archive. Martin
Wyoming, staying at Valley Ranch, and unknowingly built the industry, Woodside offers new perspectives
he partnered with Brooks Brothers heir revealing how this dangerous sport on the compelling stories about the
Winthrop Brooks to purchase Valley expresses human failing as much as nation’s past and its imagined future
Ranch in 1915. fortitude. produced by William “Buffalo Bill”
When Yellowstone National Park Cody, “American Boy Books,” Boy
Susan Nance is Professor of History Scouting, and mass-produced toys.
opened to automobile traffic, Valley
at the University of Guelph, Ontario,
Ranch became a vacation destination
Canada, where she is also affiliated Martin Woodside is a Philadelphia-
for city dwellers and an institution
faculty with the Campbell Centre for based writer, poet, and scholar and a
with influences on conservation, youth
the Study of Animal Welfare. She is founding member of the book publisher
KENSEL DUDE RANCHING IN YELLOWSTONE COUNTRY
Indian Cities
Histories of Indigenous Urbanization
Edited by Kent Blansett, Cathleen D.
Cahill, and Andrew Needham
From ancient metropolises like Pueblo Bonito and Tenochtitlán to the twenty-
first-century Oceti Sakowin encampment of the NoDAPL water protectors,
Native people have built and lived in cities—a fact little noted in either urban or
Indigenous histories. By foregrounding Indigenous peoples as city makers and
city dwellers, as agents and subjects of urbanization, the essays in this volume
simultaneously highlight the impact of Indigenous people on urban places and
the effects of urbanism on Indigenous people and politics.
The authors—Native and non-Native, anthropologists and geographers as
well as historians—use the term “Indian cities” to represent collective urban
spaces established and regulated by a range of institutions, organizations,
churches, and businesses. These urban institutions have strengthened tribal FEBRUARY
$32.95x PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-7663-5
and intertribal identities, creating new forms of shared experience and giving
344 PAGES, 6 × 9
rise to new practices of Indigeneity. Some of the essays in this volume explore
23 B&W ILLUS.
Native participation in everyday economic activities, whether in the commerce NATIVE AMERICAN/HISTORY
of colonial Charleston or in the early development of New Orleans. Others show
how Native Americans became entwined in the symbolism associated with Of Related Interest
Niagara Falls and Washington, D.C., with dramatically different consequences
for Native and non-Native perspectives. Still others describe the roles that local
Indigenous community groups have played in building urban Native American
communities, from Dallas to Winnipeg.
All the contributions to this volume show how, from colonial times to the
present day, Indigenous people have shaped and been shaped by urban spaces. INDIGENOUS FOOD SOVEREIGNTY
Collectively they demonstrate that urban history and Indigenous history are IN THE UNITED STATES
Restoring Cultural Knowledge, Protecting
incomplete without each other. Environments, and Regaining Health
Edited by Devon A. Mihesuah and Elizabeth Hoover
Kent Blansett is Langston Hughes Associate Professor of Indigenous Studies $29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-6321-5
and History at the University of Kansas. He is the author of A Journey to Freedom: LAND TOO GOOD FOR INDIANS
Northern Indian Removal
Richard Oakes, Alcatraz, and the Red Power Movement. Cathleen D. Cahill is By John P. Bowes
Associate Professor of History at Penn State University. She is the author of $34.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-5212-7
$24.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-5965-2
Federal Fathers and Mothers: A Social History of the United States Indian Service, 1869–
CHIEF THUNDERWATER
1933 and Recasting the Vote: How Women of Color Transformed the Suffrage Movement. An Unexpected Indian in Unexpected Places
Andrew Needham is Associate Professor of History at New York University. He By Gerald F. Reid
is the author of Power Lines: Phoenix and the Making of the Modern Southwest. $34.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6731-2
14 NEW BOOKS SPRING/SUMMER 2022
government entities
Power Balance
Increasing Leverage in Negotiations with Federal
and State Governments—Lessons Learned
from the Native American Experience
By Steven J. Haberfeld
Negotiation, understood simply as “working things out by talking things
through,” is often anything but simple for Native nations engaged with federal,
state, and local governments to solve complex issues, promote economic and
community development, and protect and advance their legal and historical
rights. Power Balance builds on traditional Native values and peacemaking
practices to equip tribes today with additional tools for increasing their
negotiating leverage.
As cofounder and executive director of the Indian Dispute Resolution Service,
author Steven J. Haberfeld has worked with Native tribes for more than forty
years to help resolve internal differences and negotiate complex transactions
with governmental, political, and private-sector interests. Drawing on that
FEBRUARY
$29.95x PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-7626-0 experience, he combines Native ideas and principles with the strategies of
$65.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-7651-2 “interest-based negotiation” to develop a framework for overcoming the
248 PAGES, 6 × 9 unique structural challenges of dealing with multilevel government agencies.
LAW/NATIVE AMERICAN His book offers detailed instructions for mastering six fundamental steps in
the negotiating process, ranging from initial planning and preparation to
Of Related Interest
hammering out a comprehensive, written win-win agreement.
With real-life examples throughout, Power Balance outlines measures tribes can
take to maximize their negotiating power—by leveraging their special legal
rights and historical status and by employing political organizing strategies to
level the playing field in obtaining their rightful benefits. Haberfeld includes
a case study of the precedent-setting negotiation between the Timbisha
FORCED FEDERALISM
Shoshone Tribe and four federal agencies that resolved disputes over land,
Contemporary Challenges to Indigenous Nationhood
By Jeff Corntassel and Richard C. Witmer II water, and other natural resource in Death Valley National Park in California.
$21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4191-6
Bringing together firsthand experience, traditional Native values, and the most
UNEVEN GROUND
American Indian Sovereignty and Federal Law up-to-date legal principles and practices, this how-to book will be an invaluable
By David E. Wilkins and K. Tsianina Lomawaima resource for tribal leaders and lawyers seeking to develop and refine their
$29.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-3395-9
negotiating skills and strategies.
ON THE DRAFTING OF TRIBAL CONSTITUTIONS
By Felix S. Cohen
$34.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-3806-0
Steven J. Haberfeld is cofounder and former executive director of the Indian
$19.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-6606-3 Dispute Resolution Service, Inc. He has devoted more than fifty years to
working as a community organizer, mediator, negotiator, and trainer in
multicultural and multiethnic settings.
ORDER ONLINE AT OUPRESS.COM OR CALL 80 0-848-6224 EX T. 1 15
MATHES AMELIA STONE QUINTON AND THE WOMEN’S NATIONAL INDIAN ASSOCIATION
woman reformer of Native rights
the author of Charles C. Painter: The Life of an Indian Reform Advocate, coauthor of CHARLES C. PAINTER
The Life of an Indian Reform Advocate
Reservations, Removal, and Reform: The Mission Indian Agents of Southern California, By Valerie Sherer Mathes
1878–1903, and the author and editor of books on Helen Hunt Jackson. Lori $39.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6632-2
Jacobson is the Director of the William and Mary Writing Resources Center. HELEN HUNT JACKSON AND HER
Much of her scholarly work is focused on the Women’s National Indian INDIAN REFORM LEGACY
By Valerie Sherer Mathes
Association. $21.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-2963-1
16 NEW BOOKS SPRING/SUMMER 2022
American Citizenship
and Constitutionalism in
Principle and Practice
Edited by Steven Pittz and Joseph Postell
Questions at the very heart of the American experiment—about what the
nation is and who its people are—have lately assumed a new, even violent
urgency. As the most fundamental aspects of American citizenship and
constitutionalism come under ever more powerful pressure, and as the
nation’s politics increasingly give way to divisive, partisan extremes, this book
responds to the critical political challenge of our time: the need to return to
some conception of shared principles as a basis for citizenship and a foundation
for orderly governance. In various ways and from various perspectives, this
volume’s authors locate these principles in the American practice of citizenship
and constitutionalism.
Chapters in the book’s first part address critical questions about the nature of
U.S. citizenship; subsequent essays propose a rethinking of traditional notions VOLUME 6 IN THE STUDIES IN AMERICAN
of citizenship in light of the new challenges facing the country. With historical CONSTITUTIONAL HERITAGE SERIES
freedmen, and modern identitarians—American Citizenship and Constitutionalism $29.95x PAPERBACK 978-0-8061-7538-6
$95.00x HARDCOVER 978-0-8061-7539-3
in Principle and Practice makes the case that American constitutionalism, as
324 PAGES, 6 × 9
shaped by several centuries of experience, can ground a shared notion of POLITICAL SCIENCE/HISTORY
American citizenship. To achieve widespread agreement in our fractured
polity, this notion may have to be based on “thin” political principles, Of Related Interest
the authors concede; yet this does not rule out the possibility of political
community.
By articulating notions of citizenship and constitutionalism that are both
achievable and capable of fostering solidarity and a common sense of purpose,
this timely volume drafts a blueprint for the building of a genuinely shared
political future. THE U.S. SUPREME COURT’S DEMOCRATIC SPACES
By Jocelyn J. Evans and Keith Gåddie
Steven F. Pittz is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University $45.00x Hardcover 978-0-8061-7601-7
of Colorado–Colorado Springs and is the author of Recovering the Liberal MAKING MINIMUM WAGE
Elsie Parrish versus the West Coast Hotel Company
Spirit: Nietzsche, Individuality, and Spiritual Freedom. Joseph Postell is Associate By Helen J. Knowles
Professor of Politics at Hillsdale College in Hillsdale, Michigan. He is the author $26.95s Paperback 978-0-8061-6938-5
of Bureaucracy in America: The Administrative State’s Challenge to Constitutional RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN AMERICA
Government and coeditor of Rediscovering Political Economy and Toward an American Constitutional Roots and Contemporary Challenges
Edited by Allen D. Hertzke
Conservatism: Constitutional Conservatism during the Progressive Era. $24.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4707-9
18 NEW BOOKS SPRING/SUMMER 2022
Mexico. Reproduced here in Nahuatl and English, Vetancurt’s handbook offers 346 PAGES, 6 × 9
unique insight into the history, the practice, and the meaning of the Stations of 25 B&W ILLUS.
HISTORY/LATIN AMERICA
the Cross in the New World and the Old.
With the Via crucis en mexicano as a starting point, John F. Schwaller explores Of Related Interest
the history of the development and spread of the Stations of the Cross, placing
the devotion in the context of the Catholic Reformation and the Baroque, the
two trends that exalted this type of religious expression. He describes how the
devotion, exported to New Spain in the sixteenth century, was embraced by
Spanish and natives alike. For the native Americans, Schwaller suggests, the
Via crucis resonated because of its performative aspects, reminiscent of rituals
THE FIFTEENTH MONTH
and observances from before the arrival of the Spanish. And for missionaries, Aztec History in the Rituals of Panquetzaliztli
the devotion offered a means of deepening the faith of the newly converted. In By John F. Schwaller
$39.95x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6276-8
Schwaller’s deft analysis—which extends from the origins of the devotion, to the
AZTECS ON STAGE
processions and public rituals of the Mexica (Aztecs), to the text and illustrations Religious Theater in Colonial Mexico
of the Vetancurt manuscript—the Via crucis en mexicano opens a window on the Translated and edited by Louise M. Burkhart
$24.95x Paperback 978-0-8061-4209-8
practice and significance of the Stations of the Cross—and of private devotions
SUSTAINING THE DIVINE IN
generally—in Mexico, Hispanic America, and around the world. MEXICO TENOCHTITLAN
Nahuas and Catholicism, 1523–1700
John F. Schwaller is Professor Emeritus of History at the University at Albany By Jonathan Truitt
$45.00x Hardcover 978-0-8061-6041-2
(SUNY) and is Editor of the journal The Americas. He is the author of The Fifteenth
Month: Aztec History in the Rituals of Panquetzaliztli, among other books, and a
contributor to The Directory for Confessors, 1585: Implementing the Catholic Reformation
in New Spain.
20 NEW BOOKS SPRING/SUMMER 2022
The Indian sale of Manhattan is a cherished legend, but A trailblazer in Native American linguistics and
few know that the Native people who made that sale were anthropology, Gladys Reichard (1893–1955) is one of
Munsees, with homelands between the lower Hudson and America’s least appreciated anthropologists. In her
upper Delaware river valleys. The Munsee peoples’ story has thirty-two years as founder and head of Barnard College’s
lain unnoticed in histories of the Delaware Nation. This volume anthropology department, Reichard taught that Native
interweaves archaeological, anthropological, and archival languages offered Euro-Americans the clearest views on
sources to resurrect the history of this forgotten people. North America’s first peoples, a perspective that put her at
odds with other anthropologists.
Robert S. Grumet rescues from obscurity Mattano,
Tackapousha, Mamanuchqua, and other Munsee sachems Her focus on Native psychology—revealed to her by Native
whose influence on Dutch and British settlers helped shape artists and storytellers—produced a style of ethnography
American history in the mid-Atlantic heartland. Looking different from that of Margaret Mead. Despite intense
GRUMET THE MUNSEE INDIANS
past the sale of Manhattan, he shows how Munsee leaders pressure from her peers to conform to their theories,
forestalled land-hungry colonists by selling small tracts whose Reichard held firm to her humanitarian principles and
vaguely worded titles kept courts busy—and settlers out—for methods. Her pathbreaking work in ritual and mythology;
more than 150 years. Revealing how Indians and settlers Wiyot, Coeur d’Alene, and Navajo linguistics; and folk art,
struggled, in land deals and other transactions, to reconcile gender, and language amplified her exceptional career of
cultural ideals with political realities, this authoritative teaching, editing, publishing, and mentoring.
treatment of the Munsees restores their place in history.
Drawing on Reichard’s writings and correspondence,
Robert S. Grumet, anthropologist and retired National Park this book provides an intimate picture of her small-town
Service archaeologist, is a Senior Research Associate with the upbringing, the professional challenges she faced in
McNeil Center for Early American Studies at the University male-centered institutions, and her quietly revolutionary
of Pennsylvania. His numerous publications include From contributions to anthropology. Gladys Reichard emerges as
Manhattan to Minisink: American Indian Place Names in Greater New she lived and worked—a far-sighted, self-reliant humanist
York and Vicinity and First Manhattans: A History of the Indians sustained in turbulent times by the generous, egalitarian
of Greater New York. Daniel K. Richter, the Richard S. Dunn spirit that called her yearly to the far corners of the
Director of the McNeil Center for Early American Studies and American West.
Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professor of American History
Nancy Mattina holds a Ph.D. in Linguistics and is retired
at the University of Pennsylvania, is author of Trade, Land,
faculty and founder of the Writing & Learning Commons at
Power: The Struggle for Eastern North America..
Prescott College, Arizona. She is a contributor to Studies in
Salish Linguistics in Honor of M. Dale Kinkade.
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New Mexico and Texas Native Networks and the By Diane Glancy
By Malcolm Ebright and Rick Hendricks Spread of the Ghost Dance Incorporating elements of fiction,
★ Winner of the New Mexico/Arizona By Justin Gage nonfiction, drama, and poetry, Diane
Book Award for History Glancy’s stories are lyrical yet down
In the 1860s and 1870s, the United
to earth, often tough, and gritty.
Over five centuries of foreign rule— States government forced most
Experimental, sometimes surreal in
by Spain, Mexico, and the United western Native Americans to
form, they nevertheless concern people
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who are very real. In spite of life’s hard
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realities, Firesticks is filled with humor
and encroachments on their land and to relocate, contain, and separate
and hope and a stitching together of
water rights. How five New Mexico and these Native peoples, isolating them
cultures, as the crossblood characters
Texas pueblos did this, in some cases from on e another and from the white
search for their identities.
multiple times, forms the history of populations coursing through the
cultural resilience and tenacity chronicled plains. We Do Not Want the Gates Closed Diane Glancy is an award-winning
in Pueblo Sovereignty by two of New between Us tells how Native Americans author of poetry, short stories, and
Mexico’s most distinguished legal resisted this effort by building vast plays. Her numerous works include,
historians, Malcolm Ebright and Rick intertribal networks of communication, most recently, Mary Queen of Bees and
Hendricks. threaded together by letter writing, No Word for the Sea: A Novel of Alzheimer’s.
off-reservation visiting, and the Ghost Her collection of essays, Claiming Breath,
Malcolm Ebright is a historian, an Dance. won the North American Indian Prose
attorney, and the director of the Center for Award and an American Book Award.
Land Grant Studies. He is a coauthor with Justin Gage is Instructor of History
EBRIGHT, HENDRICKS PUEBLO SOVEREIGNTY
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has developed regarding the New As American Indian communities Histories of American Indian
World contact population. Proponents face the new century, they look to the communities tell a predictable story
of this theory argue the American future armed with confidence in the about the destructive impact of
Indian population in 1492 was ten or indigenous perspectives that have missionary work on Native culture and
twenty times greater than previous kept them together thus far. Now five religion. Many historians conclude
estimates. In Numbers from Nowhere, premier scholars in American Indian that American Indian tribes who
David Henige argues that the data these history, along with a tribal leader maintained a cultural identity have
high counts are based on are meager who has placed an indelible mark on done so only because missionaries were
and often demonstrably wrong. the history of her people, show how unable to destroy it.
Drawing on primary and secondary understanding the past is the key to
In this book, Bonnie Sue Lewis relates
sources, Henige illustrates the use and solving problems facing American
how the Nez Perce and Dakota Indians
abuse of numerical data throughout Indians today. Edited by Albert L.
became Presbyterians yet incorporated
history. He shows that extrapolation of Hurtado and introduced by Wilma
Native culture into their new Christian
numbers is entirely subjective, however Mankiller, this book includes the
identities. She shows how Native clergy
masked it may be by arithmetic, and insights of scholars who have helped
forged Christian communities based on
he questions what constitutes valid shape the way an entire generation
American Indian values, kinship, and
evidence in historical and scientific thinks about American Indian history.
leadership.
scholarship.
Albert L. Hurtado is retired as
Bonnie Sue Lewis is Professor Emerita
Traders, Agents, and Weavers Kiowa Military Societies Choctaw Crime and
Developing the Northern Navajo Region Ethnohistory and Ritual Punishment, 1884–1907
By Robert S. McPherson By William C. Meadows By Devon A. Mihesuah
For travelers in northern Navajo Previous scholarship has offered only
MEADOWS KIOWA MILITARY SOCIETIES
228 PAGES, 6 × 9
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This history of the Presbyterian Church through decades that saw six U.S. scars of one of the most sophisticated
in Oklahoma reveals how Oklahoma presidents, eleven state governors, and traditions of hard-rock mining in the
Presbyterians have responded to the five university presidents, this second world. Heirs to a perfected system of
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Beginning with the territorial period, multifaceted seat of learning. National Jacks” brought generations of toilsome
Divided Hearts examines Presbyterian and world events, state politics, campus underground experience to the
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administrator, Michael Cassity is the University of Oklahoma. He is the the University of California, Berkeley.
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Index
A Nations, The, Ward, 32 Littlefield, Ruling the Waters, 27 Robinson, General Crook and
Amelia Stone Quinton and the Women’s Frisch/Kelly, Committee Assignment Politics Lovell/Lutz/Kramer, Strike the Western Frontier, 10
National Indian Association, Mathes, 15 in the U.S. House of Representatives, 29 Fear in the Land, 31 Rodeo, Nance, 12
American Citizenship and Constitutionalism Frontiers of Boyhood, Woodside, 12 M Ruling the Waters, Littlefield 27
in Principle and Practice, Pittz/Postell, 17 G Mack, Black Spokane, 6
American Dude Ranch, Downey, 1 Gage, We Do Not Want the Gates Manwaring, The Complexity of S
Anaya, The Essays, 9 Closed Between Us, 22 Modern Asymmetric Warfare, 26 San Miguel, In the Midst of Radicalism, 18
Andrews, Introduction to Geelhoed, Diplomacy Shot Down, 10 Marie Mason Potts, Castaneda, 21 Schipper, Disappearing Desert, 7
Classical Nahuatl, 32 General Crook and the Western Mathes, Amelia Stone Quinton and the Schwaller, The Stations of the
B Frontier, Robinson, 10 Women’s National Indian Association, 15 Cross in Colonial Mexico, 19
Beck, Inkpaduta, 8 Glancy, Firesticks, 22 Mattina, Uncommon Anthropologist, 20 Seeking Justice for the Holocaust, Cox, 29
Bigart, Providing for the People, 21 Goldenshteyn, So They Remember, 4 McPherson, Traders, Agents, So They Remember, Goldenshteyn, 4
Black Spokane, Mack, 6 Greenland, Hydraulic Mining and Weavers, 24 Solomon, Tatiana Proskouriakoff, 32
Blansett/Cahill/Needham, Indian Cities, 13 in California, 27 Meadows, Kiowa Military Societies, 24 Soul of a Small Town, The, Wharton, 31
Books on Trial, Wiegand/Wiegand, 7 Grumet, The Munsee Indians, 20 Meyer, Native Removal Writing, 16 Sowards, An Open Pit Visible
Britten, Voice of the Tribes, 21 H Mihesuah, Choctaw Crime and from the Moon, 27
Punishment, 1884–1907, 24 Stations of the Cross in Colonial
C Haberfeld, Power Balance, 14
Hardest Lot of Men, The, Fitzharris, 25 Military History of the Cold War, Mexico, The, Schwaller, 19
Cassity/Goble, Divided Hearts, 28
Harnessing the Airplane, Henning, 26 1962–1991, A, House, 26 Strike Fear in the Land, Lovell/
Castaneda, Marie Mason Potts, 21
Harris, Does People Do It? 11 Milner/Cannon, Reconstruction Lutz/Kramer, 31
Choctaw Crime and Punishment,
Henige, Numbers from Nowhere, 23 and Mormon America, 30 Sweet Freedom’s Plains, Moore, 30
1884–1907, Mihesuah, 24
Henning, Harnessing the Airplane, 26 Moore, Sweet Freedom’s Plains, 30 T
Committee Assignment Politics in the U.S.
Hinger, Nicodemus, 29 Munsee Indians, The, Grumet, 20 Tatiana Proskouriakoff, Solomon, 32
House of Representatives, Frisch/Kelly, 29
Horseback Schoolmarm, Liberty, 7 Muse Isaacs, Eastern Cherokee Stories, 8 Texan’s Story, A, Webb, 11
Complexity of Modern Asymmetric
Warfare, The, Manwaring, 26 House, A Military History of the N Todd, The Cornish Miner in America, 28
Cornish Miner in America, The, Todd, 28 Cold War, 1962–1991, 26 Nance, Rodeo, 12 Traders, Agents, and Weavers,
Cox, Seeking Justice for the Holocaust, 29 Hunting, For Want of Wings, 3 Native Removal Writing, Meyer, 16 McPherson, 24
Creating Christian Indians, Lewis, 23 Hurtado, Reflections on American Nicodemus, Hinger, 29 Trope, Once Upon a Time in Los Angeles, 30
Indian History, 23 Numbers from Nowhere, Henige, 23 U
D
Hydraulic Mining in California, O Uncommon Anthropologist, Mattina, 20
Daugherty, The Land and the Days, 2
Greenland, 27 Once Upon a Time in Los Angeles, Trope, 30 University of Oklahoma, Levy, 28
Diplomacy Shot Down, Geelhoed, 10
Disappearing Desert, Schipper, 7 I Open Pit Visible from the Moon, V
Divided Hearts, Cassity/Goble, 28 I Hear the Train, Owens, 9 An, Sowards, 27 Viola, Warrior Spirit, 5
Does People Do It? Harris, 11 In League Against King Alcohol, Lappas, 25 Owens, I Hear the Train, 9 Voice of the Tribes, Britten, 21
Downey, American Dude Ranch, 1 In the Midst of Radicalism, San Miguel, 18 P
Indian Cities, Blansett/Cahill/Needham, 13
W
Dude Ranching in Yellowstone Pittz/Postell, American Citizenship Ward, The Formation of Latin
Country, Kensel, 12 Inkpaduta, Beck, 8 and Constitutionalism in American Nations, 32
Introduction to Classical
E Principle and Practice, 17 Warrior Spirit, Viola, 5
Nahuatl, Andrews, 32 Power Balance, Haberfeld, 14
Eastern Cherokee Stories, Muse Isaacs, 8 We Do Not Want the Gates Closed
Ebright/Hendricks, Pueblo Sovereignty, 22 K Providing for the People, Bigart, 21 Between Us, Gage, 22
Esdaile, Women in the Peninsular War, 25 Kensel, Dude Ranching in Pueblo Sovereignty, Ebright/Hendricks, 22 Webb, A Texan’s Story, 11
Essays, The, Anaya, 9 Yellowstone Country, 12 R Wharton, The Soul of a Small Texas Town, 31
Kiowa Military Societies, Meadows, 24
F Reconstruction and Mormon Wiegand/Wiegand, Books on Trial, 7
Korkuc, Finding a Fallen Hero, 9 America, Milner/Cannon, 30 William Wayne Red Hat Jr.,
Fall of a Black Army Officer,
The, Robinson, 10, L Red Hat/Schlesier, William Red Hat/Schlesier, 8
Finding a Fallen Hero, Korkuc, 9 Land and the Days, The, Daugherty, 2 Wayne Red Hat Jr., 8 Women in the Peninsular War, Esdaile, 25
Firesticks, Glancy, 22 Lappas, In League Against King Alcohol, 25 Reflections on American Indian Woodside, Frontiers of Boyhood, 12
Fitzharris, The Hardest Lot of Men, 25 Levin Rojo, Return to Aztlan, 31 History, Hurtado, 23
For Want of Wings, Hunting, 3 Levy, University of Oklahoma, 28 Return to Aztlan, Levin Rojo, 31
Formation of Latin American Lewis, Creating Christian Indians, 23 Robinson, The Fall of a Black
Liberty, Horseback Schoolmarm, 7 Army Officer, 10
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