Description
Leveraging an Empire demonstrates how the construction of laws governing matters of race, gender, and citizenship from Oregon's pre-territorial days through its early statehood reified and institutionalized American legal definitions and national perceptions of these issues leading up to the Civil War. Oregon's exclusionary laws either supported racial and gender restrictions to specific rights or established a legal precedent for such restrictions through the development of legislation governing the remainder of the century. These laws-some developed even before Oregon became part of the Union in 1846-also influenced federal treatment toward territorial and state policies that restricted American citizens from political rights and reveal the impact of settler colonialism in the American West on the nation.
About the Author
Jacki Hedlund Tyler is an assistant professor of history and the director of social studies education at Eastern Washington University.
Reviews
"This is one of the first works of historical scholarship to explicitly take up the question of settler colonialism in the Pacific Northwest. By bringing together race and gender Jacki Hedlund Tyler offers an intersectional analysis that is also a useful contribution to the region's scholarship. Scholars working on the American West more generally will also appreciate her argument about the influence Oregon had on the rest of the country."-Coll Thrush, author of Native Seattle: Histories from the Crossing-Over Place
Book Information
ISBN 9781496219046
Author Jacki Hedlund Tyler
Format Hardback
Page Count 416
Imprint University of Nebraska Press
Publisher University of Nebraska Press