INDIGENOUS CONTINENT - PEKKA HÄMÄLÄINEN
Instant classic. I’d had this book on the radar for a while but only recently noticed it was in my father-in-law’s library so I scooped it up. Incredibly glad that I did. This book is in the class of books like People’s History which after you read allow you to really look at whole sections of history completely differently. The premise is pretty simple: the normal story about the interaction between natives and europeans in the Americas (tho the book heavily focuses on the area that is now the USA with long segments in modern Canada and Mexico) is grossly wrong and oversimplified and another paradigm is needed to really get what was going on. The normal story runs something like this, YTs arrive, starting with Columbus, and proceed to find a basically empty continent and backwards natives who put up some sort of fight, but are so demolished by disease and overmatched militarily that western civilizational forces are pretty much able to march from the Atlantic to the Pacific at will. Hämäläinen reframes this by reminding us that Natives were in control of most of the continent for most of the last 500 years, only since the late 1800’s did they not possess and rule over a huge portion of the land. So when were thinking about colonial America, the real powers are not Britain and France and the colonies, it’s the Iroquois and their allies and enemies who calling the shots and shaping the politics. This is a much needed correction, it’s threads the needle quite well between natives being total victims, noble-savage pacifists who died from the diseases and wars of the Europeans, and natives being actual savages who were fought and quickly defeated, due to their primitive ways. The truth, obviously, in in the middle. They built large empires to try to grow power and protect their land. The book makes the argument that the Iroquois, Sioux and Comanche all, at one point, constituted empires, which I would probably quibble with, but it’s a provocative take for sure. He credits these large powers with staving off the YTs long enough to allow some of the smaller groups to survive at all. The books certainly bites off more than it can chew. It’s really detailed in New England and Canada, but skimpy on regions like the PNW. Which is fine, the books is long and would need to be a dozen volumes to give subject the treatment it needs. There are some fascinating parts that try to understand this time period from an indigenous perspective and try to follow the logic of the choices they made. They continually underestimate the depravity of the YT man. They are constantly cut down by disease in a way that really makes you wish you could see the world where smallpox is just, say, 10% less deadly. There is a lot of good stuff about the political structures of the various groups and how these change in order to deal with the euros. There are detailed explanations of cultural institutions like a mourning war, which were incredible. Overall, it such a great and new way to frame this period of history, hopefully it catches on and this way of looking at this period is the standard.