Product Description
Pee Dee Indians of South Carolina are a distinct component of the population of the state, yet are little understood. Spivey has conducted detailed research into the tribe and has produced a book that describes the trials and tribulations of the group as they strive for acceptance and recognition as Indians. This is a valuable contribution to the literature of non-recognized American Indians in the Southeast. It is one of those books that will be appreciated by scholars and the general public.
From the Author
My book is the result of theoretical study of critical theory and cultural studies at York University, Canada (Revised Dissertation)and my life-long membership in the community area under study. Informed by my musings over a strategy of synthesis among the theoretical works of Foucault, Laclau and Mouffe, Said, Clifford, Marcus, Reynolds, Davies, Kondo, Willis, Denzin, Richardson, Hall, as well as others hanging around the "Post", I headed back to my home in South Carolina to "Write Culture" among the Native Americans who are still there in what was once known as the unclaimed borderland between North and South Carolina. The "Borderland" is also a metaphor for the life-narratives of a people who have lived within and against multiple histories, cultures, and identities. By way of an alternative ethnography, my informants and I try to come to terms with writing culture from the fragments of histories, and unfinished travels. The end product is a cultural critique that emerges somewhere between identity-as-essence and identity-as-conjuncture. The unfinished quality of the social, as registered in struggles over meanings, is reified as a popular, critical deconstruction of modernist notions of ahistorical and essentialized ethnic cultural and personal identities.
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