The Middle Ground, Richard White
The Middle Ground, Richard White
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The Middle Ground
Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815

Author: Richard White

Narrator: Bob Souer

Unabridged: 18 hr 54 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 04/26/2022


Synopsis

An acclaimed book and widely acknowledged classic, The Middle Ground steps outside the simple stories of Indian-white relations—stories of conquest and assimilation and stories of cultural persistence. It is, instead, about a search for accommodation and common meaning. It tells how Europeans and Indians met, regarding each other as alien, as other, as virtually nonhuman, and how between 1650 and 1815 they constructed a common, mutually comprehensible world in the region around the Great Lakes that the French called pays d'en haut. Here the older worlds of the Algonquians and of various Europeans overlapped, and their mixture created new systems of meaning and of exchange. Finally, the book tells of the breakdown of accommodation and common meanings and the re-creation of the Indians as alien and exotic. First published in 1991, the twentieth anniversary edition includes a new preface by the author examining the impact and legacy of this study.

About Richard White

Richard White is the Margaret Byrne Professor Emeritus of American History at Stanford University. He is the author of many acclaimed books in American western and environmental history, including Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America, winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the Parkman Prize, and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.


Reviews

Goodreads review by John

This is one of those touchstone books- everyone working in early American history, or Native American history, or early Canada, or the Atlantic world, or early modern France...a huge swath of historians, in other words, need to have read this book. It is true that the book is getting on in years a l......more

Incredible account of the interactions between European settlers and Native Americans in the Old Northwest, the region spanning roughly from Upper Canada through the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley in the modern Midwest. White's book posits the "middle ground" as an uneasy meeting place between empires,......more

Goodreads review by Jesse

This book is just bad at storytelling. Anecdote follows anecdote and the reader is often lost as to what geographical place we are talking about (hardly any maps), what the numbers were (no tables, at no point is it said for example that the English colonists outnumbered the French by 18 to 1), and......more