Review
Book Review: Constructing Lives at Mission San Francisco: Native Californians and Hispanic Colonists, 1776-1821
Pacific Historical Review, Vol.80(2), p.294
05/01/2011
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/2376/113837
Abstract
Using mission records as well as narratives penned by European visitors to the missions, he teases out stories of resistance on the part of indigenous peoples and successfully demonstrates that, even within mission walls, the give and take between mission Fathers and mission Indians gave rise to a heterogeneous and hybrid culture. Comparing patterns of local basketry to patterns repeated in the chapel at Mission Dolores, he argues that, even in this space, indigenous peoples managed to integrate their own art with that of the Europeans. Please direct all requests for permission to photocopy or reproduce article content through the University of California Presss Rights and Permissions website, at http://www.ucpressjournals. com/reprintinfo.asp DOI: phr.2011.80.2.294. 294 Reviews of Books 295 status, all indigenous peoples knelt on the floor while European clergy stood, vested in their finery.
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Details
- Title
- Book Review: Constructing Lives at Mission San Francisco: Native Californians and Hispanic Colonists, 1776-1821
- Creators
- Linda Heidenreich
- Publication Details
- Pacific Historical Review, Vol.80(2), p.294
- Academic Unit
- History, Department of
- Publisher
- University of California Press Books Division; Berkeley
- Identifiers
- 99900548201001842
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Review