In this innovative study author Sarah Hill illuminates the history of Southeastern Cherokee women by...
The University of North Carolina Press
8379E
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In this innovative study, author Sarah Hill illuminates the history of Southeastern Cherokee women by examining changes in their basketry. Based in tradition and made from locally gathered materials, baskets evoke the lives and landscapes of their makers.
Indeed, as Weaving New Worlds reveals, the stories of Cherokee baskets and the women who weave them are intertwined and inseparable. Incorporating written, woven, and spoken records, Hill demonstrates that changes in Cherokee basketry signal important transformations in Cherokee culture. Over the course of three centuries, Cherokees developed four major basketry traditions, each based on a different material--rivercane, white oak, honeysuckle, and maple.
Incorporating insights from written sources, interviews with contemporary Cherokee weavers, and a close examination of the baskets themselves, Hill presents Cherokee women as shapers and subjects of change. Even in the face of cultural assault and environmental loss, she argues, Cherokee women have continued to take what they have to make what they need, literally and metaphorically weaving new worlds from old. The University of North Carolina Press, paperback; 440 pages.
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