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Making Space on the Western Frontier

ebook

When Mormon ranchers and Anglo-American miners moved into centuries-old Southern Paiute space during the last half of the nineteenth century, a clash of cultures quickly ensued. W. Paul Reeve explores the dynamic nature of that clash as each group attempted to create sacred space on the southern rim of the Great Basin according to three very different world views.

With a promising discovery of silver at stake, the United States Congress intervened in an effort to shore up Nevada's mining frontier, while simultaneously addressing both the "Mormon Question" and the "Indian Problem." Even though federal officials redrew the Utah/Nevada/Arizona borders and created a reservation for the Southern Paiutes, the three groups continued to fashion their own space, independent of the new boundaries that attempted to keep them apart.

When the dust on the southern rim of the Great Basin finally settled, a hierarchy of power emerged that disentangled the three groups according to prevailing standards of Americanism. As Reeve sees it, the frontier proved a bewildering mixing ground of peoples, places, and values that forced Mormons, miners, and Southern Paiutes to sort out their own identity and find new meaning in the mess.

| Contents Acknowledgments 1. Intersections 2. Making Space 3. Power, Place, and Prejudice 4. "Listen Not to a Stranger" 5. "To Hold in Check Outside Influences" 6. "The Out-Post of Civilization" 7. "Dead and Dying in the Sagebrush" 8. Transformations Notes Selected Bibliography Index | Smith-Petit Best First Book Award, Mormon History Association, 2008. — Mormon History Association
|

W. Paul Reeve is an assistant professor of history at the University of Utah.


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Publisher: University of Illinois Press

OverDrive Read

  • ISBN: 9780252092268
  • Release date: October 24, 2013

EPUB ebook

  • ISBN: 9780252092268
  • File size: 558 KB
  • Release date: October 24, 2013

Formats

OverDrive Read
EPUB ebook

subjects

History Nonfiction

Languages

English

When Mormon ranchers and Anglo-American miners moved into centuries-old Southern Paiute space during the last half of the nineteenth century, a clash of cultures quickly ensued. W. Paul Reeve explores the dynamic nature of that clash as each group attempted to create sacred space on the southern rim of the Great Basin according to three very different world views.

With a promising discovery of silver at stake, the United States Congress intervened in an effort to shore up Nevada's mining frontier, while simultaneously addressing both the "Mormon Question" and the "Indian Problem." Even though federal officials redrew the Utah/Nevada/Arizona borders and created a reservation for the Southern Paiutes, the three groups continued to fashion their own space, independent of the new boundaries that attempted to keep them apart.

When the dust on the southern rim of the Great Basin finally settled, a hierarchy of power emerged that disentangled the three groups according to prevailing standards of Americanism. As Reeve sees it, the frontier proved a bewildering mixing ground of peoples, places, and values that forced Mormons, miners, and Southern Paiutes to sort out their own identity and find new meaning in the mess.

| Contents Acknowledgments 1. Intersections 2. Making Space 3. Power, Place, and Prejudice 4. "Listen Not to a Stranger" 5. "To Hold in Check Outside Influences" 6. "The Out-Post of Civilization" 7. "Dead and Dying in the Sagebrush" 8. Transformations Notes Selected Bibliography Index | Smith-Petit Best First Book Award, Mormon History Association, 2008. — Mormon History Association
|

W. Paul Reeve is an assistant professor of history at the University of Utah.


Expand title description text
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