"Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796
"Let us try to make each other happy" tracks a Creek-Georgia frontier as it emerged in the American Revolution and lasted to the turn of the nineteenth century. There multiple groups of Creeks, Americans, and Europeans grappled with ideas of sovereignty and the right of self-determination....
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ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_2535122020-06-19T03:09:08Z "Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796 Kokomoor, Kevin (authoraut) Frank, Andrew K. (professor directing dissertation) Moore, Dennis (university representative) Herrera, Robinson (committee member) Gray, Edward G., 1964- (committee member) Davis, Frederick (committee member) Department of History (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf "Let us try to make each other happy" tracks a Creek-Georgia frontier as it emerged in the American Revolution and lasted to the turn of the nineteenth century. There multiple groups of Creeks, Americans, and Europeans grappled with ideas of sovereignty and the right of self-determination. The Creek-Georgian frontier, however, embraces conceptualizations of frontiers as places where misunderstanding bred distrust, fear, localized violence, and eventually, racial hatred, challenging older definitions of frontiers as places of accommodation or mutual understanding. Multiple groups faced each other, and what they created was a place of terrible brutality where extremism, not compromise, was the natural way of things."Let us try to make each other happy" blends a New Indian History approach with recent interpretations of frontiers as areas of empire and nation-building. Italso carefully outlines how Creek decisions ordered Georgian lives on the backcountry, and embraces the importance of community-level identity in the study of Early American history. Ultimately, I utilize Creek, Georgian, and European threads to weave a twenty-year narrative of misunderstanding and violence that, as I argue, had tremendous bearing on the development of the southeast. A Dissertation submitted to the Department of History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Fall Semester, 2013. October 4, 2013. Includes bibliographical references. Andrew K. Frank, Professor Directing Dissertation; Dennis Moore, University Representative; Robinson Herrera, Committee Member; Edward G. Gray, 1964-, Committee Member; Frederick Davis, Committee Member. History FSU_migr_etd-8707 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-8707 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A253512/datastream/TN/view/%22Let%20Us%20Try%20to%20Make%20Each%20Other%20Happy%2C%20and%20Not%20Wretched%22.jpg |
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History "Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796 |
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"Let us try to make each other happy" tracks a Creek-Georgia frontier as it emerged in the American Revolution and lasted to the turn of the nineteenth century. There multiple groups of Creeks, Americans, and Europeans grappled with ideas of sovereignty and the right of self-determination. The Creek-Georgian frontier, however, embraces conceptualizations of frontiers as places where misunderstanding bred distrust, fear, localized violence, and eventually, racial hatred, challenging older definitions of frontiers as places of accommodation or mutual understanding. Multiple groups faced each other, and what they created was a place of terrible brutality where extremism, not compromise, was the natural way of things."Let us try to make each other happy" blends a New Indian History approach with recent interpretations of frontiers as areas of empire and nation-building. Italso carefully outlines how Creek decisions ordered Georgian lives on the backcountry, and embraces the importance of community-level identity in the study of Early American history. Ultimately, I utilize Creek, Georgian, and European threads to weave a twenty-year narrative of misunderstanding and violence that, as I argue, had tremendous bearing on the development of the southeast. === A Dissertation submitted to the Department of History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree
of Doctor of Philosophy. === Fall Semester, 2013. === October 4, 2013. === Includes bibliographical references. === Andrew K. Frank, Professor Directing Dissertation; Dennis Moore, University Representative; Robinson Herrera, Committee Member; Edward G. Gray, 1964-, Committee Member; Frederick Davis, Committee Member. |
author2 |
Kokomoor, Kevin (authoraut) |
author_facet |
Kokomoor, Kevin (authoraut) |
title |
"Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796 |
title_short |
"Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796 |
title_full |
"Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796 |
title_fullStr |
"Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796 |
title_full_unstemmed |
"Let Us Try to Make Each Other Happy, and Not Wretched": the Creek-Georgian Frontier, 1776-1796 |
title_sort |
"let us try to make each other happy, and not wretched": the creek-georgian frontier, 1776-1796 |
publisher |
Florida State University |
url |
http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-8707 |
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1719322106587512832 |