Publications

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Captives and Cousins
Slavery, Kinship, and Community in the Southwest Borderlands

James F. Brooks

Cloth ISBN 0-8078-2714-2 $55.00
Paper ISBN 0-8078-5382-8 $22.50

Copyright 2002 by The University of North Carolina Press

An Award-Winning Book
  Bancroft Prize (2002)
  Frederick Jackson Turner Award (2003)
  Francis Parkman Prize
  Erminie Wheeler-Voegelin Prize
  W. Turrentine Jackson Prize
  Frederick Douglass Book Prize (Second Prize)

Visit the University of North Carolina Press web page for this book.

“This is a stunning book, likely to be controversial in its particulars. . . . A kaleidoscopic history, Captives and Cousins is a wonderfully specific study about New Mexico but full of big ideas that will illuminate other places at the margins of states and empires.”

--Richard White


“Bold and brilliant, James Brooks’s fresh look at raiding and slaving takes us beyond the familiar categories of Indians and Hispanics to reveal the deep divisions of gender and class within each group. Sweeping over four centuries, his vivid narrative tells us why people simultaneously preyed on one another and absorbed one another in this violent land.”

--David J. Weber


“James Brooks takes the sources seriously—including transcribed oral traditions, drawings, folklore, dances, pageants, and archaeology as well as Spanish written reports. In his argument, he stretches our understanding of the nature of colonial slavery and of the dynamic processes through which kin networks created new peoples. This beautifully written book makes it impossible for historians to ignore colonial relationships in the Southwest that began contemporaneously with Jamestown and Plymouth and developed throughout the colonial period.”

--Karen Ordahl Kupperman


“Brooks’s broad and ambitious interpretation of the Southwest is carefully argued in its details and is based on exhaustive research in Spanish-language archives. It is furthered bolstered by an impressive use of anthropology, especially the well-developed literature on African kinship slavery. . . . An innovative and truly important work. It will inform scholarship on early America and on borderlands regions for many years to come.”

--William and Mary Quarterly


“This evocative study explores the captive exchange economy and the interactions between slave, Native American, and Euramerican communities in the Southwest Borderlands.”

--Civil War Book Review


“From its first memorable sentences until its final words, Captives & Cousins will hold many of its readers hostage.”

--Journal of American History


“Offers a fresh and insightful new perspective. . . . A synthesis of borderlands history that is relevant not only for students of northern Mexico and the American West, but for all who are interested in the interconnections between slavery, race and ethnicity.”

--American Studies


“An interesting study of [a] little-known slave system. . . . Brooks illustrates the similarities of Spanish and Indian cultural traditions of capture, enslavement, adoption, and exploitation of outsiders, then examines the groups’ similar notions of honor, shame, and gender. . . . Reveal[s] [a] heretofore incompletely understood social and economic Southwest slave tradition.”

--Choice


“This is an extraordinary book based on an imaginative reading of the documentary record and a judicious use of anthropological theory. By weaving ritual, folklore, and individual stories together with legal, ecclesiastical, and statistical evidence, Brooks has produced a book that satisfies the heart as well as the mind.”

--Theda Perdue, American Historical Review


“I opened up this book and could not put it down. I was just knocked out by the fact that someone could be writing about slavery in such a new and totally fresh way that expands our horizons geographically and chronologically. It’s so rare that you get bowled over by a work in your own field.”

--Scott McLemee, Chronicle of Higher Education