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  1. 2010.253.0074 - Clippings, Magazine

    Article from "Journal of Women's History", Spring 1989 discussing the role of women in the family and in politics.

    Record Type: Archive

  2. 2010.253.0181 - Document

    Chapter from "Negotiators of Change: Historical Perspectives on Native American Women", edited by Nancy Shoemaker. Routledge, New York, 1995. Chapter describes attempts to change the Cherokee into the image of the U.S. through public policy and how the Cherokees responded.

    Record Type: Archive

  3. 2010.253.0182 - Document

    Photocopy of article that discusses the traditional status of Cherokee women. "Certainly Cherokee women traditionally possessed far more rights and privileges than the European women with whom they first came into contact in the eigthteenth century. Women occupied an essential place in the aboriginal Cherokee economy and wielded considerable political power. Furthermore, Cherokee women were dominant in domestic matters and had extensive person...

    Record Type: Archive

  4. 2010.253.0240 - Document

    Article describes aspects of the Cherokee removal.

    Record Type: Archive

  5. 2010.253.0258 - Document

    "The author uses two legendary figures to explore sex, culture, and power in the conquest of the South." Article from "Southern Cultures", Vol. 3, No. 1, 1997?.

    Record Type: Archive

  6. 2010.253.0335 - Clippings, Magazine

    The article discusses the role of Cherokee women in the treaty negotiations and negotiations of land transactions during the Cherokee Removal. Article from "Journal of Women's History", Vol. 1, No. 1, Spring 1989.

    Record Type: Archive

  7. 2010.253.0501 - Map

    Photocopy of map of Cherokee lands in the west from "Nations Remembered" by Theda Perdue, 1980. Map shows capitals and territory ceded and sold.

    Record Type: Archive

  8. 2013.148.0001.1 - Clippings, Magazine

    This article describes the status of Cherokee women who "traditionally possessed far more rights and privileges than the European women with whom they first came into contact in the eighteenth century". The article is from "Furman Studies" v. 23, December 1980.

    Record Type: Archive

  9. 2016.045.0001.1 - Clippings, Magazine

    This article describes the traditional high status of Cherokee women in part to the Cherokees' matrilineal kinship system. The article is from "Furman Studies", N.S. Volume 26, December, 1980.

    Record Type: Archive

  10. 2016.094.0001.1 - Clippings, Magazine

    This article is a book review of "Cherokee Women: Gender and Culture Change, 1700-1835".

    Record Type: Archive

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