Acknowledgments
Introduction. “Everybody Needs Some Elbow Room”: Culture and Contradiction in the Study of US Expansion, Jimmy L. Bryan Jr.
1. “A Destiny in the Womb of Time”: US Expansion and Its Prophets, Jimmy L. Bryan Jr.
2. Stealing Naboth’s Vinyard: The Religious Critique of Expansion, 1830–1855, Daniel J. Burge
3. The Art of Indian Affairs: Land and Sky in Charles Bird King’s Keokuk, the Watchful Fox, Kenneth Haltman
4. Expansion in the East: Seneca Sovereignty, Quaker Missionaries, and the Great Survey, 1797–1801, Elana Krischer
5. Armed Occupiers and Slaveholding Pioneers: Mapping White Settler Colonialism in Florida, Laurel Clark Shire
6. Geographies of Expansion: Nineteenth-Century Women’s Travel Writing, Susan L. Roberson
7. Revising Hannah Duston: Domesticity and the Frontier in Nineteenth-Century Retellings of the Duston Captivity, Chad A. Barbour
8. Autobiography across Borders: Reading John Dunn Hunter’s Memoirs of a Captivity among the Indians of North America from Childhood to the Age of Nineteen, Andy Doolen
9. The Lansford Hastings Imaginary: Visions of Democratic Patriarchy in the Americas, 1842–1867, Thomas Richards Jr.
10. Safely “Beyond the Limits of the United States”: The Mormon Expulsion and US Expansion, Gerrit Dirkmaat
11. At the Center of Southern Empire: The Role of Gulf South Communities in Antebellum Territorial Expansion, Maria Angela Diaz
12. Inventing a National Past: Archaeological Investigation in the Southwest in the Aftermath of the US-Mexican War, 1851–1879, Matthew N. Johnston
Contributors
Index
A photo gallery follows page 130