The Americas That Might Have Been: Native American Social Systems through Time

The Americas That Might Have Been: Native American Social Systems through Time

by Julian Granberry
The Americas That Might Have Been: Native American Social Systems through Time

The Americas That Might Have Been: Native American Social Systems through Time

by Julian Granberry

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Overview

Imagines the development of the Western Hemisphere without European contact and colonization
 
This work answers the hypothetical question: What would the Americas be like today—politically, economically, culturally—if Columbus and the Europeans had never found them, and how would American peoples interact with the world’s other societies? It assumes that Columbus did not embark from Spain in 1492 and that no Europeans found or settled the New World afterward, leaving the peoples of the two American continents free to follow the natural course of their Native lives.

The Americas That Might Have Been is a professional but layman-accessible, fact-based, nonfiction account of the major Native American political states that were thriving in the New World in 1492. Granberry considers a contemporary New World in which the glories of Aztec Mexico, Maya Middle America, and Inca Peru survived intact. He imagines the roles that the Iroquois Confederacy of the American Northeast, the powerful city-states along the Mississippi River in the Midwest and Southeast, the Navajo Nation and the Pueblo culture of the Southwest, the Eskimo Nation in the Far North, and the Taino/Arawak chiefdoms of the Caribbean would play in American and world politics in the 21st Century.

Following a critical examination of the data using empirical archaeology, linguistics, and ethnohistory, Granberry presents a reasoned and compelling discussion of native cultures and the paths they would have logically taken over the past five centuries. He reveals the spectacular futures these brilliant pre-Columbian societies might have had, if not for one epochal meeting that set off a chain of events so overwhelming to them that the course of human history was forever changed.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780817383459
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Publication date: 11/17/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Julian Granberry is Language Coordinator with Native American Language Services in Florida and author of numerous publications, including A Grammar and Dictionary of the Timucua Language.
 

Table of Contents

Contents List of Figures 000 Preface 000 Introduction: The Whys and Wherefores 000 Part I. In the Beginning 000 1. Men Out of Asia 000 2. America 1492 000 Part II. The Inner Man 3. Native Philosophies of Life 000 4. Unitary Norms: The Asian Perspective 000 5. The Dualistic View: The European Norm 000 6. The Trinary Compromise: The Near Eastern Norm 000 Part III. The Matrix of Lives 000 7. The Empire of Tawantinsuyu 000 8. The Empire of the Méxica 000 9. The Maya Kingdoms 000 10. The Mississippian Cities and Towns 000 11. The Pueblo Towns 000 12. The Taíno Chiefdoms 000 Part IV. The Future of the Past 000 13. Hemispheric-Internal Relationships in the Twenty-first Century: The Inner Design 000 14. Commerce and Discovery of the Old World 000 15. International Alliances and Interaction in the Twenty-first Century: The Outer Scheme 000 Epilogue: The First Baktun 000 References 000 Index 000
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