Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845

This dissertation illustrates the role of indigenous trading women in significant events that shaped the borderlands Great Lakes region, including the French and Indian War, the American Revolutionary War, the Northwest Indian War, and treaty negotiations. Understanding the role of Native women trad...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Macgillivray, Emily
Other Authors: Miles, Tiya A, Witgen, Michael, Cotera, Maria E, Dowd, Gregory E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/138756
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spelling ftumdeepblue:oai:deepblue.lib.umich.edu:2027.42/138756 2024-01-07T09:38:21+01:00 Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845 Macgillivray, Emily Miles, Tiya A Witgen, Michael Cotera, Maria E Dowd, Gregory E application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/138756 en_US eng https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/138756 orcid:0000-0002-9378-8022 Macgillivray, Emily; 0000-0002-9378-8022 indigenous women settler colonialism Great Lakes borderlands fur trade trading women History (General) Humanities Thesis ftumdeepblue 2023-12-10T17:52:36Z This dissertation illustrates the role of indigenous trading women in significant events that shaped the borderlands Great Lakes region, including the French and Indian War, the American Revolutionary War, the Northwest Indian War, and treaty negotiations. Understanding the role of Native women traders is necessary to understanding both how these events unfolded and how they were affected by gendered indigenous practices, including kinship and hospitality. These women influenced the flow of commerce by producing and distributing valuable trade goods and contributed to the mapping and enforcement of political borders through their participation in legal conflicts and treaty negotiations. Recognizing the lives of Great Lakes trading women is essential to understanding the intertwined development of economics and politics in the region. Furthermore, ignoring the contributions of indigenous trading women enforces male-centered, settler colonial narratives of the region that demotes the women to the accessories of their EuroAmerican partners. While previous scholarship on gender and the Great Lakes has focused on indigenous women’s role in fur trade marriages, this project examines indigenous women in the Great Lakes borderlands as independent economic and political agents and illustrates how settler colonialism operated as a gendered process. As EuroAmerican settlement increased, customs like coverture were enforced and Native kinship networks and forms of inheritance were eroded, creating fewer opportunities for indigenous women to acquire property. However, elite Native women drew on multiple subversive and gendered forms of resistance, including kinship networks, language skills, and knowledge of trade networks, to attempt to navigate a settler colonial system designed to deny indigenous land claims. This project covers the mid-eighteenth to mid-nineteenth century and is grounded in the lives of Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe women who operated as adroit transnational actors in the borderlands Great Lakes, ... Thesis anishina* University of Michigan: Deep Blue Indian
institution Open Polar
collection University of Michigan: Deep Blue
op_collection_id ftumdeepblue
language English
topic indigenous women
settler colonialism
Great Lakes borderlands
fur trade
trading women
History (General)
Humanities
spellingShingle indigenous women
settler colonialism
Great Lakes borderlands
fur trade
trading women
History (General)
Humanities
Macgillivray, Emily
Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845
topic_facet indigenous women
settler colonialism
Great Lakes borderlands
fur trade
trading women
History (General)
Humanities
description This dissertation illustrates the role of indigenous trading women in significant events that shaped the borderlands Great Lakes region, including the French and Indian War, the American Revolutionary War, the Northwest Indian War, and treaty negotiations. Understanding the role of Native women traders is necessary to understanding both how these events unfolded and how they were affected by gendered indigenous practices, including kinship and hospitality. These women influenced the flow of commerce by producing and distributing valuable trade goods and contributed to the mapping and enforcement of political borders through their participation in legal conflicts and treaty negotiations. Recognizing the lives of Great Lakes trading women is essential to understanding the intertwined development of economics and politics in the region. Furthermore, ignoring the contributions of indigenous trading women enforces male-centered, settler colonial narratives of the region that demotes the women to the accessories of their EuroAmerican partners. While previous scholarship on gender and the Great Lakes has focused on indigenous women’s role in fur trade marriages, this project examines indigenous women in the Great Lakes borderlands as independent economic and political agents and illustrates how settler colonialism operated as a gendered process. As EuroAmerican settlement increased, customs like coverture were enforced and Native kinship networks and forms of inheritance were eroded, creating fewer opportunities for indigenous women to acquire property. However, elite Native women drew on multiple subversive and gendered forms of resistance, including kinship networks, language skills, and knowledge of trade networks, to attempt to navigate a settler colonial system designed to deny indigenous land claims. This project covers the mid-eighteenth to mid-nineteenth century and is grounded in the lives of Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe women who operated as adroit transnational actors in the borderlands Great Lakes, ...
author2 Miles, Tiya A
Witgen, Michael
Cotera, Maria E
Dowd, Gregory E
format Thesis
author Macgillivray, Emily
author_facet Macgillivray, Emily
author_sort Macgillivray, Emily
title Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845
title_short Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845
title_full Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845
title_fullStr Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous Trading Women of the Borderland Great Lakes,1740 to 1845
title_sort indigenous trading women of the borderland great lakes,1740 to 1845
url https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/138756
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/138756
orcid:0000-0002-9378-8022
Macgillivray, Emily; 0000-0002-9378-8022
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