The ways in which identities were created throughout the Atlantic World
have been the subject of many recent works. Scholars have studied
identity formation in Europe, Africa, and the Americas from the
beginning of European colonization in the fifteenth century through the
independence movements of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries. Native American identities followed similar patterns of
construction in the Carolinas compared with others in the Atlantic
World. Become As One People investigates the ways in which Spanish and
English colonists identified Native Americans in the Carolinas from
their earliest voyages in the sixteenth century to the first United
States census in 1790. It argues that colonists' identifications for
Native Americans reflected the usefulness of Native American polities to
the Spanish and English in achieving their goals of colonization, their
preconceptions about Native Americans they intended to colonize, and the
nature of their relationship with Native American polities in the
Carolinas. The book should be of use to those interested in identity,
the Atlantic World, and Native American History.