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Patricia Riles Wickman - The tree that bends: discourse, power, and the survival of the Maskókî people

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Patricia Riles Wickman offers a new paradigm for the interpretation of southeastern Native American and Spanish colonial history and a new way to view the development of the United States.In her compelling and controversial arguments, Wickman rejects the myths that erase Native Americans from Florida through the agency of Spaniards and diseases and make the area an empty frontier awaiting American expansion. Through research on both sides of the Atlantic and extensive oral history interviews among the Seminoles of Florida and Oklahoma, Wickman shatters current theories about the origins of the people encountered by the Spaniards and presents, for the first time ever, the Native American perspective. She describes the genesis of the groups known today as Creek, Seminole, and Miccosukeethe Maskoki peoplesand traces their common Mississippian heritage, affirming their claims to continuous habitation of the Southeast and Florida. Her work exposes the rhetoric of conquest and replaces it with the rhetoric of survival. An important cross-disciplinary work, The Tree That Bends reveals the flexibility of the Maskoki people and the sociocultural mechanisms that allowed them to survive the pressures introduced at contact. Their world was capable of incorporating the New without destroying the Old, and their descendants not only survive today but also succeed as a discrete culture as a result.

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The Tree That Bends Discourse Power and the Survival of the Maskk People - photo 1
The Tree That Bends
Discourse, Power, and the Survival of the Maskk People
Patricia Riles Wickman
THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA PRESS
Tuscaloosa and London

title:The Tree That Bends : Discourse, Power, and the Survival of the Maskk People
author:Wickman, Patricia R.
publisher:University of Alabama Press
isbn10 | asin:0817309667
print isbn13:9780817309664
ebook isbn13:9780585141138
language:English
subjectCreek Indians--History--Sources, Creek philosophy, Creek Indians--Social life and customs, Florida--History--Spanish colony, 1784-1821, Spain--Colonies--America--Administration, Spain--Foreign relations.
publication date:1999
lcc:E99.C9W58 1999eb
ddc:975.9/004973
subject:Creek Indians--History--Sources, Creek philosophy, Creek Indians--Social life and customs, Florida--History--Spanish colony, 1784-1821, Spain--Colonies--America--Administration, Spain--Foreign relations.
Page iv
Copyright 1999
The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0380
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00 99
The paper on which this book is printed meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Science-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Wickman, Patricia Riles, 1944
The tree that bends : discourse, power, and the survival of the
Maskk people / Patricia Riles Wickman.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8173-0966-7 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Creek IndiansHistorySources. 2. Creek philosophy. 3. Creek
IndiansSocial life and customs. 4. FloridaHistorySpanish colony,
17841821. 5. SpainColoniesAmericaAdministration. 6.
SpainForeign relations. I. Title.
E99.C9 W58 1999
975.9'004973ddc21 98-58025
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data available
Page v
Uuh... Pat, this is Jim Billie. How 'bout grabbin' your guitar and comin' on over.
We'll sit around the fire and sing some songs about ol' Osceola.
Thank you, my dear. I'd love to.
I once heard someone quote Salvador Dal, saying that the principal objective of all his work was "to systematize confusion and discredit reality." I never checked that quotation. I didn't need to. In that moment, Dal made total sense to me, and I felt a closer kinship than ever to that fascinating Catalan. That's as close to "truth" as I could ever hope to come.
Page vii
CONTENTS
Illustrations
ix
Preface
xi
Acknowledgments
xvii
1. Introduction: A People Obscured by Their Past
1
Part I: The Maskoklg
2. The Four-Cornered Circle
25
Picture 2
The Cultural Genesis of the Maskk Peoples
25
Picture 3
The "Maskk" Construct
35
Picture 4
The Maskoklg
40
3. The Tree That Bends
43
Picture 5
The Cosmogonic Circle
43
Picture 6
The Dynamic Society
51
Picture 7
The Oral Tradition
60
4. Geography, Society, and Continuity
67
Picture 8
Redefining the Discussion
67
Picture 9
When a Vantage Point Becomes a Disadvantage
68
Picture 10
What's in a Name?
73
5. Power and Gender
82
Picture 11
Matriliny Versus Matriarchy
82
Picture 12
The Horizontal Analytic: Public Power
89
Picture 13
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