Reclaiming the Ancestors: Decolonizing a Taken Prehistory of the Far NortheastReclaiming the Ancestors sets the record straight about the early history of the Wabanaki - the Abenaki, Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, Malecite, and Mi'kmaq. Wiseman proposes a sovereigntist approach to understanding the current archaeological understanding of Abenaki prehistory. He begins with an overview of the conflicting views of First Nations and archaeologists regarding Indigenous history and how he developed his research design model. Over the next 10 chapters the book explores and discusses the periods of Wabanaki prehistory. The final chapter takes the history to the beginning of the early contact period. The author makes he point that documentation of Wabanaki territory is of vital importance in today’s political climate of Vermont. The Wabanaki face major obstacles as politicians utilize archaeological evidence against the Wabanaki’s push for self-governance and recognition. The book contains limited black and white photographs of artifacts because the author made a conscious choice to respect items that were from grave sites. A fascinating history that dispels many previously-held academic viewpoints of the Wabanaki First Nations. |
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Contents
Late Pleistocene Paleogeography of Wôbanakik | 23 |
The Wôbanakiawik Colonize the Late Pleistocene Dawnland | 57 |
The Wôbanakiawik Settle into | 88 |
Copyright | |
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Reclaiming the Ancestors: Decolonizing a Taken Prehistory of the Far Northeast Frederick Matthew Wiseman No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
14C date Abenaki agriculture American ancestors ancient Wabanakis animals archaeological archaeologists Archaic period artifacts atlatl banakis believe bifaces bone Boucher Complex Bourque Brunswick burial caribou celts ceramics ceremonial Champlain Sea chert chipped-stone Clovis coast coastal comm contained cultural Dawnland distinctive Early Woodland period east ethnic evidence fish fluted points geographic glacial gorget gouges ground-stone Gulf of Maine Gulf of St Haviland and Power hunters hunting Indian interaction sphere Iroquois Island Labrador Lake Champlain land Lanoraie Late Archaic Lawrence Iroquoian Leavitt lithic marine materials Meadowood midden Middle Archaic Mikmaq mound Museum Native Newfoundland Northeast northeastern northern Nova Scotia Ontario Oxbow Paleoindian Penobscot perhaps Petersen point types pottery prehistory projectile points quarries Quebec Ramah region River scholars scrapers shell southern stone tion trade tradition Tuck Valley Vermont Vinette Wabanaki homeland western Wabanaki Winooski Wiseman Wôbanakik Woodland period Wright York