
From Bayou Teche to Fifth Avenue
How Basket Diplomacy Saved the Chitimacha Indian Nation
$178.16
- Hardcover
384 pages
- Release Date
1 August 2026
Summary
Daniel H. Usner offers a cultural, political, and social history of the Chitimacha Tribe in South Louisiana and its struggle for political sovereignty. Between the 1890s and 1940s, Chitimacha Indian women in South Louisiana – with extraordinary baskets they created from rivercane – strategically built a network of allies that originated in a relationship with neighboring white women and that would eventually extend across the United States. Responding resourcefully to renewed interest in thei…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781496246691 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1496246691 |
| Author: | Daniel H. Usner |
| Publisher: | University of Nebraska Press |
| Imprint: | University of Nebraska Press |
| Format: | Hardcover |
| Number of Pages: | 384 |
| Release Date: | 1 August 2026 |
| Weight: | 0g |
| Dimensions: | 229mm x 152mm |
| Series: | New Visions in Native American and Indigenous Studies |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
“Intimately grounded on the banks of Bayou Teche, but reaching far beyond, Daniel Usner celebrates the incredible Chitimacha women and their white allies who preserved community by weaving baskets as well as personal connections. The result is a powerful tribute to the women whose fight to save their nation changed America.“—Cathleen D. Cahill, author of Federal Fathers and Mothers: A Social History of the United States Indian Service, 1869–1933
“Truly a remarkable piece of scholarship! The depth and breadth of coverage is amazing. Daniel Usner takes the history of a much-neglected tribe and links it to broad themes of race, class, gender, and the environment across U.S. history, and he covers several genres of historical study to boot. From Bayou Teche to Fifth Avenue is an eminently readable text that will appeal to people with a broad range of interests.“—Katherine M. B. Osburn, author of Choctaw Resurgence in Mississippi: Race, Class, and Nation Building in the Jim Crow South, 1830–1977
“In From Bayou Teche to Fifth Avenue, Chitimacha women take center stage as artists, negotiators, and defenders of their nation… . With clarity and eloquence, historian Daniel Usner reveals how [Chitimacha] ‘basket diplomacy’ became both political resistance and cultural endurance. Brimming with vivid detail and amplifying overlooked voices, this book makes a powerful contribution to art history, Indigenous studies, and political history as a testament to resilience, creativity, and Indigenous leadership.“—Denise E. Bates, author of Basket Diplomacy: Leadership, Alliance-Building, and Resilience among the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana, 1884–1984
About The Author
Daniel H. Usner
Daniel H. Usner is Holland N. McTyeire Professor Emeritus of History at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of Native American Women and the Burdens of Southern History and Weaving Alliances with Other Women: Chitimacha Indian Work in the New South, among other books. In 2024 Usner was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society of Ethnohistory.
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