In this Issue
Native South challenges scholars of southern history to expand their conception of the field to include more than the black and white post-colonial south that colors much of the historical literature of the region. The journal focuses on the investigation of Southeastern Indian history with the goals of encouraging further study and exposing the influences of Indian people on the wider South. It does not limit itself to the study of the geographic area that was once encompassed by the Confederacy, but expands its view to the areas occupied by the pre-contact- and the post-contact descendants of the original inhabitants of the South, wherever they may be.
published by
University of Nebraska Pressviewing issue
Volume 9, 2016Table of Contents

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View The “Owner of the Town Ground, Who Overrules All When on the Spot”: Escotchaby of Coweta and the Politics of Personal Networking in Creek Country, 1740–1780
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View “They Don’t Like Indian around Here”: Chitimacha Struggles and Strategies for Survival in the Jim Crow South
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ISSN | 2152-4025 |
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Print ISSN | 1943-2569 |
Launched on MUSE | 2016-08-12 |
Open Access | No |