Facing East From Indian Country: A Native History Of Early America

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Martha Valdez February 15, 2014 HIST. 4316-201 Dr. Weight Book Review Facing East from Indian Country: A Native History of Early America, Daniel Richter's Facing East from Indian Country: A Native History of Early America, turns many heads as Richter changes the traditional outlook of the Westward expansion all the way to the American Revolution by viewing certain events through the eyes of the Native Americans who were settled in this land years before the new colonizations started. It was not easy to try and make a complete work about the different perspectives that the Natives had, due to the fact that many sources are works from Europeans or they were filtered by them. Richter explains that Native people sketch out elaborative paintings in their house or on barks of living trees, many of these sources obviously have not lasted long enough for us to examine. This book, however gives great detail and fully analyzes the "aggressively expansionist Euro-American United States" (p. 8-7) that rose from what belonged to Indian Country. Richter challenges you to compose a new framework of the Indian and European encounters reforming the "master narrative" of early American colonization from the Native point of view. The point of Ritcher's work is not only to tell old stories from a Native point of view but finding out Indians as they were with European colonization happening in their land. How he words the differences of " old documents being read in different to reorient our perspective on the continent's past" (p. 9) outlines the period of Western colonization in America rather than Western colonization of America. Imagination is required for the reconstruction of our new point of view from the Natives. Richter follows... ... middle of paper ... ...vitable, brutal warfare ushered in the eighteenth century. It seemed like colonist and Natives would never find a way to peacefully share the continent and coexist together. War over land was not the only issue. Despite the diversity between the Natives and the English, they became more as merchants that produced a well consumed market. Richter explains the luxuries that most aristocrats to even commoners got to have in their households such as: imported tea, coffee, sugar, rum, and other luxuries, but suddenly they began to see the world as a racial view between "red" versus "white". The balance that these two paths had was broken down when France (French and Indian War) ended and France was forced to leave the continent. The author gives specific details and explains how the Natives and the british hardened their racial views of each other. Richter helps you view

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