"Native Providence effectively demolishes stereotypes that deny Indian people a place in New England's cities and modernity. . . . Recovering and telling those histories is a challenging task, requiring painstaking research, patience, dedication, and imagination, but Native Providence shows it can be done and provides a model of how to do it."—Colin G. Calloway, American Historical Review
“[Native Providence] is revelatory—an entirely new way of looking at this old ‘thoroughfare’ city. . . . Rubertone’s innovative work . . . stands out as a model of historical archaeological analysis and practice—an embodiment of the hopes of the discipline’s founders that the skillful inter-reading of archaeological collections, geographical evidence, and what James Deetz called ‘docufacts’ can contribute to analyses that transcend the study of any one of these bodies of data separately."—Kathleen J. Bragdon, American Antiquity
"Rubertone has produced an important work for Natives and non-Natives alike, one that challenges preconceived notions of who we are as Native people as well as what we can be."—Hartman H Deetz, Native American and Indigenous Studies
"Native Providence is a timely and politically important book as Indigenous people in the East continue to fight the pernicious and lingering trope of disappearance with histories of an historic and continuing Native presence."—Jeffrey L. Hantman, Journal for the Anthropology of North America
"Rubertone offers a critical and humanistic, detailed and nuanced approach of the central role of Native people both in the past and the 'emerging modernity' of the city of Providence."—Marianne Sallum, Historical Archeology
"Rubertone's archival research is impressive, and her reading of documentary evidence—of what it reveals and what it does not—is a model for how to find Native people in the archives, particularly Indigenous subjects that are sometimes only found in traces."—Laura M. Furlan, Journal of Anthropological Research
"Native Providence: Memory, Community, and Survivance in the Northeast intricately weaves together the biographies and movements of everyday Native individuals and families as they made their lives in the city of Providence."—Christopher J. Slaby, Western Historical Quarterly
"Rubertone has conducted meticulous. . . . This social history of survivance offers a fresh perspective on urban Indian ethnic identity in a southern New England city across two centuries."—J. H. Rubin, Choice
“Patricia Rubertone deftly undermines the myth that cities don’t have indigenous histories or presents, and she challenges the notion that Native people whose homelands are often called ‘New England’ have disappeared. Through painstaking archival research, conversations with community members, and attention to the local landscape, Rubertone has produced a readable and usefully disorienting account of one historic city’s encounter with both settler colonialism and indigenous survivance.”—Coll Thrush, author of Indigenous London: Native Travellers at the Heart of Empire
“Native Providence is a magnificently grounded, humane study of indigenous resilience and adaptation. It recovers the complexities and contradictions of Native individuals and families who worked to make the city their own place and navigated the pressures and exclusions of settler colonialism to create their own forward-looking modernities. It places Native people and voices at the center and in doing so provocatively reorients us to a seemingly familiar city.”—Christine M. DeLucia, author of Memory Lands: King Philip’s War and the Place of Violence in the Northeast