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Michael R. H. Swanson, Ph. D.
Office:  CAS 110
Hours:         T, Th,  9:30 - 11:00
W, 2:00 - 3:00,  F, 1:00-2:00
Phone:  254 3230
E-mail:  amst335@msn.com
American Studies 335
New England
Roger Williams University
CAS 228
Tuesday and Friday, 2:00 - 3:20
Fall Semester, 2006
The Week's Work
Histories of the First Nations
An online book about Massasoit and Native Americans who lived where Roger Williams University stands today
For Tuesday, September 19

Complete readings in Mourt's Relation, parts IV and V.

We'll spend some time this period looking at similarities and differences in the contact with Native Americans as experienced by both Pilgrim and Puritan settlers. These are complicated and controversial stories, and our knowledge is filtered through a single point of view... that of the white population. Reminding ourselves that we may be misled by these one-sided interpretations, yet we can still learn something about the ways both the white and Native American population sought to exploit the contact with the other. I do not use exploit in a negative sense. I simply mean a conscious attempt to use something to one's own advantage. (As in exploiting internet resources to do research.).
To augment your understanding  concerning Native American Tribes in New England, visit two useful resources... each of which contains links to historical and contemporary information about a number of the most important tribes in this area. Clicking on the links to the left will carry you to these. See what you can find about at least one of the tribes mentioned in Wood or Mourt.

Do note that both these sites are created by amateurs, and must be used with some caution. You will find these at:

For Friday, September 22

From the Internet, Download and Read

Phineas Pratt’s Account of the Wessagussett Plantation,

Relations between the English and Native Americans were frequently tense, and often marked by bluster, bluff, chicanery, and outright deceit. Phineas Pratt was in the thick of things from the first, and his narrative provides a good sense of this. It reads as if it would make a good screenplay. Perhaps it needs to be taken with a grain of salt, for reasons which the introduction on the website will make clear.

On the Internet, visit Plimoth Plantation’s 1627 Re-creation,  visiting the sections on the 1627 village and the Wampanoag Settlement.  Take some time to look through some of the Historical Background section, as well. 

Plimoth has reorganized and revised its website: alas, not for the better.  It used to be possible to visit each of the buildings in this recreation of the village, but that is no longer possible.  However, it is still worth spending some time browsing.  The Virtual Tour allows you to visit the recreated village and an interior of one of the houses.  You will need to download a special viewer to do this.  Perhaps one of the more interesting parts of the website is an introduction to the philosophy of interpretation used at Plimoth.  Read through it, including information about how the interpreters are trained.  Note that there are summer employment possibilities there, if any of you are theatrically inclined.