Which of the following describes the process of Tribalization that occurred in America in the early eighteenth century?

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journal article

Carib Ethnic Soldiering in Venezuela, the Guianas, and the Antilles, 1492-1820

Ethnohistory

Vol. 37, No. 4 (Autumn, 1990)

, pp. 357-385 (29 pages)

Published By: Duke University Press

//doi.org/10.2307/482860

//www.jstor.org/stable/482860

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Abstract

The phenomena of "ethnic soldiering" and "tribalization" have been noted worldwide in relation to the impact of European colonialism on native peoples, but they have not been explicitly linked. The case of the Carib (Karinya) and Caraibe (Kalinago) is examined here with emphasis on the role of military cooperation with the Europeans in the formulation of Amerindian ethnicity. Various current theories of ethnicity are also discussed in the light of this material.

Journal Information

Ethnohistory emphasizes the joint use of documentary materials and ethnographic or archaeological data, as well as the combination of historical and anthropological approaches, in the study of social and cultural processes and history. The journal has established a strong reputation for its studies of the history of native peoples in the Americas and in recent years has expanded its focus to cultures and societies throughout the world. Ethnohistory publishes articles, review essays, and book reviews by scholars in anthropology, history, archaeology, linguistics, literature and art history, geography, and other disciplines and is read by historians and anthropologists alike.

Publisher Information

Duke University Press publishes approximately one hundred books per year and thirty journals, primarily in the humanities and social sciences, though it does also publish two journals of advanced mathematics and a few publications for primarily professional audiences (e.g., in law or medicine). The relative magnitude of the journals program within the Press is unique among American university presses. In recent years, it has developed its strongest reputation in the broad and interdisciplinary area of "theory and history of cultural production," and is known in general as a publisher willing to take chances with nontraditional and interdisciplinary publications, both books and journals.

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Ethnohistory © 1990 Duke University Press
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