
Native American Log Cabins in the Southeast
In a rapidly changing social, economic, and political landscape at the frontiers of an expansionist United States, the log cabin, a northern European house form, proved equally adaptable to the needs of settlers, slaves, and Native peoples. Each found ways to make log cabins their own. Beneath these deceptively simple hewn facades, indigenous principles of correctness guided southeastern Indians’ uses of interior cabin space, creations of raised clay hearths, and maintenance of pits that gave occupants access to the regenerative properties of the Beneath World. The chapters in this volume make important contributions toward a better understanding of houses and households in the Native Southeast by marshalling new data, methods, and theory to address an important but understudied phenomenon.
- Redaktör
- Gregory A. Waselkov
- ISBN
- 9781621905042
- Språk
- Engelska
- Vikt
- 560 gram
- Utgivningsdatum
- 2019-04-08
- Sidor
- 277