From: CHSS Grad Admins [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Susan Turriziani
Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2018 2:53 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Dissertation Announcement - Royce Gildersleeve
To: The George Mason University Community
The College of Humanities and Social Sciences is pleased to announce the following dissertation defense:
Wednesday, April 25, 2018
02:00 PM - 04:00 PM
George Mason University, Fairfax Campus
Johnson Center, Room 333
The dispossession of Virginia Indians took the form of a long confrontation over the cultural power of legal Indianness. In the aftermath of the Powhatan wars of the early 17th century, Indian tribes that had been members of the Powhatan confederacy
found themselves categorized as tributary Indians, placed upon reservation land, and bound to the strict laws of a fledgling Virginia colony. Tribes not associated with the Powhatan confederacy were categorized as non-tributary, and for a time existed on the
periphery of the Jamestown area, what was then the center of Anglo-Indian Virginia. Both of these groups became embroiled in legal contests that saw their work ethic questioned, their identity as an Indian people challenged, as well as other obstacles—such
as having their children systematically taken away from them by the state for use as indentured servants. These communities, all living “behind the frontier,” in close approximation to both Euro-Americans and African-Americans, were constantly defending their
identity as an Indian people in order to fight off attempts at dispossession. These attempts, in which there are examples throughout Virginia during the colonial and early Republic era, are based in a European understanding of agrarian property and an anxiety
over racial difference.
Copies of the dissertation are on reserve in the Johnson Center Library. The doctoral project will not be read at the meeting, but should be read in advance.
All members of the George Mason University community are invited to attend.