Anne Hyde

Huntington

Wednesday, October 19, 2022, 11:30 pm EDT
Rothenberg Hall 1151 Oxford Road San Marino, CA 91108

Anne Hyde, professor of history at the University of Oklahoma, discusses how intermarriage was a vital Native strategy using sex, diplomacy, and captivity to create a successful world of mixed-descent people who pioneered the American West. That success challenged U.S. ideas about who deserved frontier opportunities. Indian country's mixed-descent families and their Indigenous kin soon faced a sharply racist white America determined to end intermarriage. Using personal -- and sometimes painful -- stories, Hyde examines specific families who built the fur trade in the North and who ended up everywhere in the U.S. West.

 

This is the Rogers Distinguished Fellow Lecture.

Date
Wed, Oct 19 2022, 11:30pm | 0 seconds