Abstract

Abstract By the Principles of their Craft, Ethnohistorians Sooner or later get around to examining both sides of their various cultural frontiers. For a long time, anthropologists dominated the discipline and devoted most of their attention to the study of Indian groups, past and present. With the increasing participation of historians in the early 1970s, ethnohistory has expanded its purview to treat the other side of the frontier, but somewhat more critically than Western or Turnerian frontier historians of previous generations were wont to do. One group of historians who have shown a sustained interest in Indians, or at least the idea of Indians, are intellectual historians, who have written extensively on the changing views of Indians held by European and Ameriacan observers.

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