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The place of stone : Dighton Rock and the erasure of America's indigenous past /

Claimed by many to be the most frequently documented artifact in American archeology, Dighton Rock is a forty-ton boulder covered in petroglyphs in southern Massachusetts. In this fascinating story rich in personalities and memorable characters, Douglas Hunter uses Dighton Rock to reveal the long, c...

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Bibliographic Details
Call Number:Libro Electrónico
Main Author: Hunter, Doug, 1959- (Author)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, [2017]
Subjects:
Online Access:Texto completo
Table of Contents:
  • A lost Portuguese explorer's American boulder
  • First impressions and first arrivals: colonists encounter Dighton Rock
  • Altogether ignorant: denying an indigenous provenance and constructing gothicism
  • Multiple migrations: esotericism, Beringia, and Native Americans as Tartar hordes
  • Stones of power: Edward Augustus Kendall's esoteric case for Dighton Rock's indigeneity
  • Colonization's new epistemology: American archaeology and the road to the Trail of Tears
  • Vinland imagined: the Norsemen and the gothicists claim Dighton Rock
  • Shingwauk's reading: Dighton Rock and Henry Rowe Schoolcraft's troubled ethnology
  • Reversing Dighton Rock's polarity: Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, the American Ethnological Society, and the Grave Creek Stone
  • Meaningless scribblings: Edmund Burke Delabarre, lazy Indians, and the Corte-Real theory
  • American place-making: Dighton Rock as a Portuguese relic
  • The stone's place: Dighton Rock Museum and narratives of power.