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Unexceptional United States: The history of Cherokee Nation between the…
Unexceptional United States: The history of Cherokee Nation between the Colonial and Postcolonial
Postcolonial Studies
First and Second Waves exclude Native Americans from the postcolonial realm
Third World Countries who meet the Spatio-Temporal postcolonial conditions
The postcolonial is about ‘’the national culture after the departure of the imperial power.’’(1) or used ‘‘to distinguish between the periods before and after independence (‘colonial period’ and ‘post-colonial period’)’ (1)’ The Empire Writes Back (Ashcroft, Griffith, Tiffin 1)
The US is a Postcolonial country (to the British Empire)
The U.S is postcolonial dating its postcoloniality to the its revolutionary period ,The Empire Writes Back (Ashcroft, Griffith, Tiffin 2 and 16) .
The 1990’s debate of the US Colonial and Postcolonial nature
/ Reviziting postcolonial Studies
The US is Colonial and Postcolonial the same time
Hulme, Peter. "Including America." Ariel 26.1 (1995)
The US is not postcolonial but a colonial country
De alva, third world n america can't be the same
Klor de Alva, J. Jorge. "The Postcolonization of the (Latin) American Experience: A Reconsideration of 'Colonialism,' 'Postcolonialism,and 'Mestizaje'." After Colonialism. Imperial Histories and Post Displacements. Ed. Gyan Prakash. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1995. 241-
75.
gesa, natives r internally colonized
Gesa Mackenthun America's Troubled Postcoloniality: Some Reflections from Abroad Source: Discourse, Vol. 22, No. 3, IMPERIAL DISCLOSURES: Part I (Fall 2000), pp. 34-45 Published by: Wayne State University Press Stable URL:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/41389583
Accessed: 13-05-2020 14:06 UTC
Mclintock ,it's an affront to natives
Revisiting US History and Native Americans
The myth of 'American Exceptionalism'
Manifest Destiny
Mission Civisilatrice
US Democracy
Transnational approach to US history
Historical Amnesia
Native Dispossession
Westward Expansionism...
Cherokee Nation and the Trail of Tear
s
The age of Jackson and the Indian Removal Act
Resistance
Colonial Practices
Post-Trail of Tears
The Allotment Era
Accultaration
Uprootedness
Civil Rights Movement and Pan-Indian Identity
Pre-Trail of Tears
Government-to-Government treaties
Belief in American Democratic Values
Resilience: Assimilation