THE STUDY of SUSTAINED COLONIALISM: AN EXAMPLE from the KASHAYA POMO HOMELAND in NORTHERN California

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Abstract

This article advocates for archaeological investigation of sustained colonialism that examines the implications of Native American negotiations with multiple waves of foreigners over the course of many decades, if not centuries. The study of native confrontations with successive groups of intruders, who often represented a diverse range of colonial programs and interests, involves analyses of not only indigenous encounters with first-wave colonists but also their entanglements with later colonists, particularly settler colonists. This will provide the necessary diachronic approach to consider the cumulative effects and implications of multiple colonial intrusions on specific tribes and how tribal negotiations with earlier colonial enterprises may have influenced and shaped their responses to later settler colonists. This article presents a case study of one such approach for the study of sustained colonialism that examines native entanglements with mercantile and settler colonists in northern California.

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Lightfoot, K. G., & Gonzalez, S. L. (2018). THE STUDY of SUSTAINED COLONIALISM: AN EXAMPLE from the KASHAYA POMO HOMELAND in NORTHERN California. American Antiquity, 83(3), 427–443. https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.17

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