Why did I love this book?
It’s extremely rare that an author’s thesis is so powerful and compelling that it completely overturns how you view the past.
Such is the case in Pekka Hamalainen’s rich narrative history of North America, offered from the perspective of Native Americans. “The history of the overwhelming and persisting Indigenous power,” Hamalainen writes, “remains largely unknown, and it is the biggest blind spot in common understandings of the American past.”
Many of us were taught that the European conquest of North America was inevitable, but Hamalainen shows this wasn’t true. His discussion of the Five Nations in the 17th century is a perfect example of the power of Native Americans to effectively resist the colonizers from Europe. This outstanding book covers 400 years of history in a fresh and provocative way.
2 authors picked Indigenous Continent as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
American history and self-understanding have long depended on the notion of a "colonial America", an era that-according to prevailing accounts-laid the foundation for the modern United States. In Indigenous Continent, the acclaimed historian Pekka Hamalainen shatters this Eurocentric narrative by retelling the four centuries between first contacts and the peak of Native power from Indigenous points of view. Shifting our perspective away from Jamestown, Plymouth, the American Revolution and other well-worn episodes on the conventional timeline, Hamalainen depicts a sovereign world of distinctive Native nations whose members, far from simple victims of colonial aggression, controlled the continent well into the…