2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaa.2008.10.002
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“…being weary, they had rebelled”: Pueblo subsistence and labor under Spanish colonialism

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Cited by 46 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Studies of food riots and moral economies of food suggest that people experience anger, outrage, and other forms of emotional distress when they feel that social injustices produce food shortages or price hikes (e.g., Messer 2009;Orlove 1997;Scott 1977;Spielmann et al 2009). Recent research indicates that perceived inequity or injustice in water institutions may be a major driver of emotional distress.…”
Section: Social Injusticementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies of food riots and moral economies of food suggest that people experience anger, outrage, and other forms of emotional distress when they feel that social injustices produce food shortages or price hikes (e.g., Messer 2009;Orlove 1997;Scott 1977;Spielmann et al 2009). Recent research indicates that perceived inequity or injustice in water institutions may be a major driver of emotional distress.…”
Section: Social Injusticementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite long-term research on the biocultural effects of European contact on indigenous communities in the Americas (Verano and Ubelaker, 1992;Larsen, 1994;Larsen and Milner, 1994;Baker and Kealhofer, 1996;Larsen et al, 2001;Klaus and Tam, 2009;Spielmann et al, 2009), evidence of the historical battles or skirmishes of the Spanish conquest of indigenous populations has proven elusive (Larsen, 1994). Only two cases of osteological evidence for violent conflict at or shortly after Spanish conquest are known from North America (Hutchinson, 1996;Larsen et al, 1996).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several other examples demonstrate instances of resilience, continuity, and the maintenance of cultural identities throughout the recent colonial period (Oland et al 2012;Preucel 2002;Reséndez 2005;Spielmann et al 2009;Schrieber and Mitchell 2010;see also Lightfoot 2005); my final example comes from architectural interpretations of structures on the Crow Reservation in eastern Montana. There, a powerful narrative associated with the young chief Plenty Coups' vision quest to Montana's Crazy Mountains in the 1850s helped shape and add meaning to the built environment created by and for Crow (Apsáalooke) people as they moved onto reservation land in south-central Montana in the early 1880s; in turn, this became an example of the ways in which the Crow coped with and survived the onslaught of regional environmental transformations brought about by ranching, extractive industries, and water control (Carter et al 2005, pp.…”
Section: Colonialism and Postcolonialismmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…When the Spanish arrived and established the colony of New Mexico in 1598, they found a region already settled and subsequently documented Pueblo, Navajo, Apache, and Ute people and villages (Liebmann 2006;Preucel 2002;Spielmann et al 2009;Staski 2005;Wilcox 2009). Indian-Spanish interactions in colonial New Mexico during the 16th and 17th centuries were not without conflict.…”
Section: Colonialism and Postcolonialismmentioning
confidence: 99%