Page 267 - Confronting Race Women and Indians on the Frontier, 1815 - 1915
P. 267

NOTES  TO  PAGES  60-63


                  (New  Haven,  Conn.: Y  ale  University  Press,  1960); Dr. Albert  C.  Koch,
                 Journey through a Part if the United States if North America in the Years 1844
                  to  1846,  trans.  and  ed.  Ernst  A.  Stadler  (Carbondale:  Southern  Illinois
                  University  Press,  1972); and  Moritz  Busch,  Travels between the Hudson  &
                  the Mississippi,  1851-1852,  trans. and  ed.  Norman  H.  Binger  (Lexington:
                  University Press  of Kentucky,  1971).
               9.  Isabella  L.  Bird,  The Englishwoman  in America  (Madison:  University  of
                  Wisconsin Press,  1966), 143 .
              10.  Fredrika Bremer, The Homes if the New W o rld: Impressions of  America, trans.
                  Mary Howitt  (New  o rk: Harper  and Brothers,  1868), 555.
                                 Y
              II.  For  a  fuller  discussion,  see  Glenda  Riley,  Taking  Land,  Breaking  Land:
                  W o men  Colonizing  the  American  and  Kenyan  Frontiers,  1815-1915
                  (Albuquerque: University  of New Mexico Press, 2003) .
              1 2 .   Richard  D.  W  o lff,  The  Economics  of   Colonialism:  Britain  and  Kenya,
                  1870-1930 (New Haven, Conn.:Yale University Press, 1974), 1-2; and John
                  R. Godard, Racial Supremacy; Being Studies in Imperialism (Edinburgh, UK:
                  Geo. A. Morton,  1905), 11, 216.
              13.  George M. Fredrickson, White Supremacy:A Comparative Study inAmerican
                                         Y
                          f
                                                                   8
                  and SouthA rican History (New  o rk: Oxford University Press, 19 1 ) , 7 -13;
                                          A
                  and VY. Mudimbe,  The Idea  if  f rica  (Bloomington:  Indiana  University
                  Press,  1994), 212-13 .
              14.  Catherine Hall, White, Male, and Middle-Class Explorations in Feminism and
                  History  (New Y o rk:  Roudedge,  1992), 75-93 ;  and  Mary  Poovey,  Uneven
                  Development:  The  Ideological  l¥c>rk  of   Gender  in  Mid- V ictorian  England
                  (Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago  Press,  1988), 3-4,  164-20 .
                                                                  1
              15.  Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher,A f rica and the Victorians:The O ffi cial
                  Mind  <if  Imperialism  (London:  Macmillan,  1961),  1-3 .  See  also  R.
                  Coupland,  The Exploitation of  East A f rica,  1856-1890  (London: Faber and
                  Faber,  1939).
              16.  Rev.  Oliver Prescott  Hiller, A  Chapter on Slavery  (London: Hodson  and
                  Son, 1860), 12.
              17.  Quote is in  W  o lff, Economics <if Colonialism,  134-35·
              18.  Kathleen M.Tillotson, Novels if the 1840S (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1954),
                  13-14, 24·
              19.  Richard D.Altick, The English Common Reader:A Social History of  the M a ss
                  Reading Public, 1800-1900 (Chicago, Ill. : University of Chicago Press, 1957),
                  83-86, 97,  100-110,  128-29,  131-35, 141-42, 152,  173 ,  188,  191-93, 200,
                  212-17, 239-40, 260-69, 277, 286, 29 , 318, 330-39, 364-68.
                                               3
              20.  Allan  Nevins,  ed.,  America  through  British  Eyes  (New  Y o rk:  Oxford
                  University  Press,  1948), v-vi,  3 ,   9;  Oscar  Handlin,  ed.,  This Uils America
                  (Cambridge:  Harvard  University Press, 1949), 1-4, 7-8.
              2 1 .   D. L. Ashliman, "The American W  e st  in Twentieth-Century  Germany,"



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