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The Color of the Land: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832-1929

Online ISBN:
9781469604398
Print ISBN:
9780807833650
Publisher:
University of North Carolina Press
Book

The Color of the Land: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832-1929

Published:
1 February 2010
Online ISBN:
9781469604398
Print ISBN:
9780807833650
Publisher:
University of North Carolina Press

Abstract

This book brings the histories of Creek Indians, African Americans, and whites in Oklahoma together into one story that explores the way races and nations were made and remade in conflicts over who would own land, who would farm it, and who would rule it. This story disrupts expected narratives of the American past, revealing how identities—race, nation, and class—took new forms in struggles over the creation of different systems of property. Conflicts were unleashed by a series of sweeping changes: the forced “removal” of the Creeks from their homeland to Oklahoma in the 1830s, the transformation of the Creeks' enslaved black population into landed black Creek citizens after the Civil War, the imposition of statehood and private landownership at the turn of the twentieth century, and the entrenchment of a sharecropping economy and white supremacy in the following decades. In struggles over land, wealth, and power, Oklahomans actively defined and redefined what it meant to be Native American, African American, or white.

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