Alaska: An American Colony

Front Cover
University of Washington Press, 2006 - History - 372 pages
Alaska has not evolved in a vacuum. It has been part of larger stories: the movement of Native peoples and their contact and accommodation to Western culture, the spread of European political economy to the New World, and the expansion of American capitalism and culture.

Alaska, an American Colony focuses on Russian America and American Alaska, bringing the story of Alaska up to the present and exploring the continuing impact of Alaska Native claims settlements, the trans-Alaska pipeline, and the Alaska Lands Act. In contrast to the stereotype of Alaska as a place where rugged individualists triumph over the harsh environment, distinguished historian Stephen Haycox offers a less romantic, more complex history that emphasizes the broader national and international contexts of Alaska's past and the similarities between Alaska and the American West. Covering cultural, political, economic, and environmental history, the book also includes an overview of the region's geography and the anthropology of Alaska's Native peoples.

Throughout Alaska, an American Colony, Haycox stresses the continuing involvement of Alaska Natives in the state's economic, political, and social life and development. He also explores the power of myth in historical representations of Alaska and the controlling influence of national perceptions of the region.

Stephen Haycox, professor of history at the University of Alaska Anchorage, is author of Frigid Embrace: Politics, Economics and Environment in Alaska and coeditor of An Alaska Anthology: Interpreting the Past.

"Having read every general history of Alaska from Bancroft to the present, and many studies of special Alaskan topics, and having lived in Alaska for more than forty years - I have only one comment: Alaska: An American Colony is by far the finest history of Alaska yet produced." - Wallace M. Olson, Professor of Anthropology, Emeritus, University of Alaska

 

Contents

Prologue
v
Acknowledgments
xiv
Alaska Geography and the Anthropology of Its Native Peoples
1
RUSSIAN AMERICA
33
Russian America an Introduction
35
Russian Eastward Expansion and the Kamchatka Expeditions
38
Exploitation and the Origins of the Contest for Sovereignty
51
Grigorii Shelikhov and the Russian American Company
69
American Alaska an Introduction
157
Taking the Measure of Alaska The Alaska Purchase and the Politics of the Early Economy
168
National Currents in Alaska The Gold Rush and Progressive Reform
199
Pioneer Alaska The Last Frontier
234
War and the Transition to Statehood
255
Modern Alaska The Last Wilderness
271
Epilogue
311
Notes
317

Aleksandr Baranov
86
Russian America
113
The Sale of Russian America
145
AMERICAN ALASKA
155
Bibliography
341
Index
361
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Stephen Haycox, professor of history at the University of Alaska Anchorage, is author of Frigid Embrace: Politics, Economics and Environment in Alaska and coeditor of An Alaska Anthology: Interpreting the Past.

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