Notes^247
systems-and-trails-76573 (accessed September 24, 20I3). Graphics show
locations of major roads.
- Starr, History of the Cherokee Indians and Their Legends and Folk Lore.
- Conley, Cherokee Nation, cited in Cox, The Red Land to the South, 8.
CHAPTER TWO: CULTURE OF CONQUEST
Epigraph: Marx, Capital, 823; http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/
works/i 86 7-cI/ch3 I .htm.
- Spicer, Cycles of Conquest, 283-85.
- Linebaugh, The Magna Carta Manifesto, 26-27.
- Two outstanding historical works, which have not been surpassed, probe
in depth these prior colonial practices and institutions. In reference to the
Iberian Peninsula and the Moors, see Kamen, Spanish Inquisition. For
England's colonization of Ireland and the thirteen American colonies, see
Jennings, Invasion of America.
- Kingston-Mann, "Return of Pierre Proudhon."
- Federici, Caliban and the Witch, I84.
- Ibid., I7I-72, I79-80.
- Ibid., 237.
- Roth, Conversos, Inquisition, and the Expulsion of the Jews from Spain,
- Sanchez-Albornoz, Espana, un enigma hist6rico, 677.
- Stannard, American Holocaust, 246. For an opposing view, see Anderson,
Ethnic Cleansing and The Indian.
II. Jennings, Invasion of America, I68.
I2. See Curtis, Apes and Angels.
I3. Calloway, review of The Americas That Might Have Been, I96.
- Keen, "White Legend Revisited," 353.
I5. Denevan, "Pristine Myth," 4-5.
I6. Dobyns, Their Number Become Thinned, 2. See also Dobyns, Native
American Historical Demography; and Dobyns, "Estimating Aboriginal
American Population," 295-4I6, and "Reply," 440-44.
I7. Borah, "America as Model," 381.
I8. Cook, Conflict between the California Indian and White Civilization.
I9. Wilcox, Pueblo Revolt and the Mythology of Conquest, II.
CHAPTER THREE: CULT OF THE COVENANT
- Mann, 1491, 32 3.
- Rostlund, Myth of a Natural Prairie Belt in Alabama, 409.
- Mann, 1491, 252.
- Denevan, "Pristine Myth," 36 9-85.
- Faragher, Buhle, Czitrom, and Armitage, Out of Many, I-24. The title of