Poquosin

Poquosin

EnglishEbook
Kirby, Jack Temple
The University of North Carolina Press
EAN: 9781469623863
Available online
€43.05
Common price €47.83
Discount 10%
pc

Detailed information

Jack Temple Kirby charts the history of the low country between the James River in Virginia and Albemarle Sound in North Carolina. The Algonquian word for this country, which means 'swamp-on-a-hill,' was transliterated as 'poquosin' by seventeenth-century English settlers. Interweaving social, political, economic, and military history with the story of the landscape, Kirby shows how Native American, African, and European peoples have adapted to and modified this Tidewater area in the nearly four hundred years since the arrival of Europeans. Kirby argues that European settlement created a lasting division of the region into two distinct zones often in conflict with each other: the cosmopolitan coastal area, open to markets, wealth, and power because of its proximity to navigable rivers and sounds, and a more isolated hinterland, whose people and their way of life were gradually--and grudgingly--subjugated by railroads, canals, and war. Kirby's wide-ranging analysis of the evolving interaction between humans and the landscape offers a unique perspective on familiar historical subjects, including slavery, Nat Turner's rebellion, the Civil War, agricultural modernization, and urbanization.
EAN 9781469623863
ISBN 1469623862
Binding Ebook
Publisher The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date December 1, 2014
Pages 320
Language English
Country Uruguay
Authors Kirby, Jack Temple
Series Studies in Rural Culture