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Book Review
| Constructing Floridians: Natives and Europeans in the Colonial Floridas, 1513–1783. By Daniel S. Murphree. (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2006. x, 188 pp. $55.00, ISBN 0-8130-3024-2.)
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| Daniel S. Murphree is interested less in the origins of racism than the "attitudes, perceptions, and events that fostered the use of racial labels to partially justify an emerging hierarchical society" (p. 6). He also frees himself from well-worn scholarly divisions of inquiry by seeking similarities in Spanish, French, and British colonists' descriptions of native peoples from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries in what he calls the colonial Floridas. When European newcomers encountered difficulties in their efforts to extract wealth from the environment or to establish profitable trade, effective missions, and political power among the native populations, they blamed the indigenous inhabitants. Citing Indians' "barbarity," physical appearances, and "paganism," European settlers as disparate as Spanish Jesuits in St. Augustine, French soldiers along the Mississippi River, and British traders in the interior of what would become Alabama, vented their frustrations. Murphree argues that because those lands changed imperial hands and because colonizers maintained only a marginal presence, the relationships between Europeans and Indians "were based on mutual limitations rather than exclusive hegemony well into the nineteenth century" (p. 2). Europeans' inability to dominate the land and its people made them racialize, or express their negative feelings about, the natives they met. |
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