“Claudia Haake’s fine-grained study details an emerging world of early nineteenth-century American Indian letter writing, in which Native peoples reshaped familiar rhetoric and animated new forms of diplomacy to preserve their independence and control over land and culture. Modernity through Letter Writing makes a major contribution to studies of indigenous literary production and political consciousness.”—Philip J. Deloria, coeditor of A Companion to American Indian History
“What is especially important about this volume is the way Haake presents in historical context the urgent transition that indigenous nations, such as the Cherokees and Senecas, went through to adapt the English language into their political and cultural sovereignty at a time of crisis.”—David Martínez, author of Life of the Indigenous Mind: Vine Deloria Jr. and the Birth of the Red Power Movement
“Extraordinary. . . . This is a sui generis study for all of us to rethink how American Indians shaped their histories.”—Donald L. Fixico, author of Call for Change: The Medicine Way of American Indian History, Ethos, and Reality