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Author Allen, Paula Gunn.

Title Pocahontas : medicine woman, spy, entrepreneur, diplomat / Paula Gunn Allen.

Imprint San Francisco : HarperSanFrancisco, ©2003.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Kansas Collection J Schick  975.501 P75Ba 2003    ---  Lib Use Only
Edition 1st ed.
Description xvi, 350 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 337-350) and index.
Contents Oo-maa'o/Introduction -- Apowa/Dream-vision -- Pocahontas/Mischief -- Manito Aki/Faerie -- Apook/The esteemed weed -- Topacoh/At the end of the day -- Appendix 1. John Rolfe's letter to Master Thomas Dale -- Appendix 2. John Smith's letter to Queen Anne -- Appendix 3. Don Diego de Molina's letter to King Philip of Spain, 1613.
Summary In striking contrast to conventional accounts, Pocahontas is a bold and daring biography that attempts to tell the extraordinary story of the beloved Indian maiden from the Native American perspective. Drawing from sources often overlooked by Western historians, Dr. Paula Gunn Allen offers remarkable new insights into the adventurous life and sacred role of this foremost American heroine. We have all heard about the love-struck Pocahontas saving the dashing Captain John Smith from execution by the Chief of the Powhatans, but what if the whole event was a staged ritual of his death as a foreigner and his rebirth as an adopted member of the Powhatan Nation? Settlers at Jamestown report a young, cartwheeling Pocahontas frequently at their fort, but could the innocent-looking visitor actually have been a spy -- reporting back to her elders what she saw there? Was Pocahontas willingly kidnapped by the British settlers in exchange for corn and other ransom from her tribe, or was this a part of her more elaborate plan? We have been taught that this amazing woman was later baptized a Christian and married in the church at Jamestown, yet she helped her husband, John Rolfe, grow and export tobacco -- a powerful, indigenous herb to which the Native Americans attributed shamanic powers. Finally, the "Indian Princess," now known as Lady Rebecca Rolfe, traveled to England for an audience with King James I and Queen Anne. Was this a publicity stunt orchestrated by the English backers of the Virginia colony, or was Pocahontas fulfilling her role as a "Beloved Woman," an honor designated to a female of great spiritual power who was to be trained from birth in the diplomatic and political ways of her tribe? Pocahontas became an extraordinary ambassador, forming groundbreaking relations between the Indians, the American colonists, and the British. Dr. Gunn Allen convincingly argues that through all of this, Pocahontas fulfilled a crucial and essential role in the birth of a New World. This stunning portrait presents the fascinating, untold story of one of the most romantic and beloved figures in American history, and reveals why so many have revered Pocahontas as the female counterpart to George Washington, the true "Mother of Our Nation."
Subject Pocahontas, -1617.
Powhatan women -- Biography.
Powhatan women -- History -- Sources.
Smith, John, 1580-1631.
Rolfe, John, 1585-1622.
Jamestown (Va.) -- History.
Pocahontas, -1617. (OCoLC)fst01841745
Rolfe, John, 1585-1622. (OCoLC)fst00453424
Smith, John, 1580-1631. (OCoLC)fst00051860
Powhatan women. (OCoLC)fst01074490
Virginia -- Jamestown. (OCoLC)fst01205035
Genre/Form Biography. (OCoLC)fst01423686
History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Sources. (OCoLC)fst01423900
ISBN 006053687X
9780060536879
0060730609 (pbk.)
9780060730604 (pbk.)
Standard No. 9780060536879

 
    
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