The first two centuries of contact between Native and non-Native groups
set into motion new social practices, definitions of personhood, and
hierarchies of class, ethnicity, race, and gender. Diana diPaolo Loren
focuses on the social and material interactions between groups living
east of the Mississippi River during the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries. In Contact explores how these diverse groups lived, worked,
fought, intermarried, and died while unpacking the baggage of colonial
contact.