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NOTES  T  O    PAG  E S   3-7


              6.  For the usefulness of missionary records, see Vicki Ruiz, "Dead Ends or
                                                                  W
                Gold Mines?: Using Missionary Records in Mexican-American  o men's
                History," Frontiers  12  (1991): 35-56.
              7.  Angela  Cavender Wilson, "American  Indian  History  or  Non-Indian
                Perceptions of American Indian History?" 23-26,in Natives andAcademics:
                Researching  and Writing  about American  Indians,  ed. Devon A. Mihesuah
                (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1998).
              8. John  Frost,  Pioneer  Mothers  of   the  T#st;  or,  Daring  and Heroic  Deeds  of
                American Vl0men (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1875), 22.
             9.  Michael  G.  Kenny,  "A  Place  f o r  Memory: The  Interface  between
                Individual  and  Collective  History,"  Comparative  Studies  in  Science  and
                                      1
                History 41 Guly 1999): 420-2 ;   and James C. Scott, Domination and the Arts
                of  Resistance: Hidden Transcripts (New Haven, Conn.:Yale University Press,
                1990).
             10.  For the importance of considering many groups, see Susan Armitage and
                Elizabeth Jameson, eds., Writing the Range: Race,  Class, and Culture in the
                W o men5 T#st (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1997).
             I I .   Robert J. Hind, "The Internal Colonial Concept," Comparative Studies of
                Society 26 Guly 1984): 543-68.
             12.  That the highpoint of the American W e st was  1 8 48 to 1889 is argued in
                W a lter Nugent, Into the T#st: The Story of  Its  People (New  o rk: Alfred A.
                                                             Y
                Knopf, 1999).
             13 .  For what constitutes a western fr ontier and the W e st, see Aaron W a lker,
                "Wild Frontiers: Imagined Geographies and the American W e st" (Ph.D.
                diss., University of Massachusetts Amherst, 2001); andW Douglas Seefeldt,
                "Constructing  e stern Pasts: Place and Public Memory in the  w entieth­
                           W
                                                                T
                               W
                Century American  e st" (Ph.D. diss.,Arizona State University, 2001).
             14.  Walter Nugent, "Frontiers and Empires in the Late Nineteenth Century,"
                161-66,  in  Trails:  Toward  a  New  T#stern  History,  ed.  Patricia  Nelson
                Limerick,  Clyde  A.  Milner  II,  and  Charles  E.  Rankin  (Lawrence:
                University  Press  of Kansas,  1991); and  Robert A. Jackson, "American
                Regional Theory: T o ward a Theory of the Region in the United States
                and Its  Roles  in the Production  of American Literature and  Culture"
                              Y
                (Ph.D. diss., New  o rk University, 2001).
             15.  Christopher  Chase-Dunn  and  Thomas  D.  Hall,  Rise  and  Demise:
                Comparing  W o rld-Systems  (Boulder,  Colo.:  Westview,  1997),  27-58,
                200-23  ;   and Hall, "World-Systems Analysis:A Small Sample from a Large
                      I
                Universe," in A Vl0rld Systems Reader: New Perspectives on Gender, Urbanism,
                Cultures, Indigenous Peoples, and Ecology,  ed.Thomas D. Hall (Lanham, Md.:
                Rowman and Littlefield, 2000), 3-28.
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