Page 262 - Confronting Race Women and Indians on the Frontier, 1815 - 1915
P. 262

NOTES  TO  PAGES  37-39

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              88.  Chickering Carter, Kid  Curry's Last Stand (New  o rk: Street and Street,
                  1907), 5, II.
              89.  Sander L. Gilman, Difference  and Pathology: Stereotypes  cif Sexuality,  Race,
                                                                     2
                  and  Madness  (Ithaca, N. :   Cornell  University  Press,  1985),  15- 1 ;   and
                                     Y
                  Homi Bhabha, "Of Mimicry and  Man: The Ambivalence  of Colonial
                  Discourse,"  October  28  (1983):  125-34.  For  a  f u ller  discussion  of bad
                  Indians, see Richard Slotkin, Regeneration through Violence: The Mythology
                  cif  the  American  Frontier,  1600--1860  (Middletown,  Conn.:  W e sleyan
                  University Press, 1973).
              90.  Roy Harvey Pearce, The Savages  cif America; A  Study cif the Indian and the
                  Idea cif Civilization (Baltimore:Johns Hopkins Press, 1965), 3-5; Frederick
                  T u rner,  "The T e rror  of the Wilderness,"  American  Heritage  28  (1977):
                  59-62;Alden T.Vaughn, "From White Man to Redskin: Changing Anglo­
                  American Perceptions of the American Indian," American Historical Review
                  87 (November  1982): 917-53.
              91.  Robert F. Berkhofer, Jr.,  The White Man's Indian: Images  cif the American
                  Indian J rom  Columbus  to  the  Present  (New Y o rk: Alfred A. Knopf,  1978;
                  Vintage Books, 1979), 2, 23-28; Ronald T. Takaki, Iron  Cages: Race  and
                  Culture  in  Nineteenth-Century America  (New  o rk: Knopf,  1979), 55-65,
                                                     Y
                  92-107. T w o  older, yet useful, works  are  Bernard W  Sheehan,  Seeds  oj
                                                                    Y
                  Extinction: Jiffersonian Philanthropy and the American I n dian (New  o rk: W
                  W Norton, 1973 ;   and Michael Paul Rogin, Fathers and Children:Andrew
                               )
                                                           Y
                 J a ckson and the Subjugation cif the American Indian (New  o rk:Vintage, 1975).
              92.  Rowlandson quoted in Nancy B. Black and Bette S.  e idman, White on
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                  Red: Images cif the American Indian (Port  a shington, N. Y.: Kennikat Press,
                                                W
                                                         J
                  1976), 41-48;James E. Seaver, ed., The Story cif Mary  e mison (Canandaigua,
                  N.Y.: J. D. Bemis, 1824); and Emeline Fuller, Left by  the Indians.  Story oj
                  My  Life  (Mount Vernon, Iowa: Hawk-Eye  Steam Print,  1892), 29. The
                 legacy of these images is discussed in Christopher Castiglia, Bound and
                  Determined:  Captivity,  Culture-Crossing,  and White Womanhood J rom  Mary
                  Rowlandson to Patty Hearst (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996).
              93.  Stanley  B.  Kimball,  "The  Captivity  Narrative  on  Mormon  Trails,
                  1846-65," Dialogue: A Journal oj  Mormon Thought 18  (winter 1985): 81-88;
                  and James F. Brooks, '''This Evil Extends Especially . . .   to the Feminine
                  Sex': Negotiating Captivity in the New Mexico Borderlands," Feminist
                  Studies 22 (summer 1996): 279-310.
              94.  Abbie Gardner-Sharp, The S p irit Lake Massacre and the  Captivity cif Miss
                  Abbie  Gardner  (Des  Moines:  Iowa  Printing  Co.,  1885); Mary  Buder
                  Renville, A Thrilling Narrative cif Indian Captivity (Minneapolis: Adas Co.,
                  1863); and Fuller, Left by the Indians,  29.
              95.  Quotes  are  in Lonnie ]. White, "White W o men  Captives  of Southern
                             1
                  Plains Indians,  8 66-1875,"Journal cif the Jiliest 8 Ouly 1969): 332, 336.

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