UNP - Nebraska
Searching for the Bright Path: The Mississippi Choctaws from Prehistory to Removal
Searching for the Bright Path: The Mississippi Choctaws from Prehistory to Removal
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Carson shows how the Choctaws struggled to adapt to life in a New World altered radically by contact while retaining their sense of identity and place. Despite changes in subsistence practices and material culture, the Choctaws made every effort to retain certain core cultural beliefs and sensibilities, a strategy they conceived of as following "the straight bright path."
This work also makes a significant theoretical contribution to ethnohistory. Carson confronts common problems in the historical analysis of Native peoples: how to allow for and capture concurrent transformations and stability in a given culture; how to emphasize individual agency and consciousness; and how to connect the Native peoples described in the accounts of explorers and early settlers with the late prehistoric Native societies known only through the archaeological record.
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