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We Will Receive Justice: Native Histories of the Collapse of the California Missions

Autor Lee M. Panich, Gustavo Flores
en Limba Engleză Hardback – sep 2026
We Will Receive Justice explores how Native people in the southern San Francisco Bay Area—the ancestors of today’s Ohlone community—navigated the collapse of the California mission system. The volume spans from Mexican independence in 1821 through the region’s annexation by the United States in 1846, as Native people from Mission Santa Clara and Mission San José fought for emancipation and restitution amid rapidly changing colonial circumstances.
The narrative is driven by a reexamination of archives related to the Pueblo of San José, the territorial capital of Monterey, and early U.S. court cases regarding Mexican-era land grants, contextualized through an in-depth analysis of mission records that illuminate the complex social connections of Native individuals and families. We Will Receive Justice offers an ethnohistorical lens for viewing the Indigenous history of Mexican California, examining not simply the history of colonization but how Native people drew on cultural traditions and social relationships to create new lives for themselves in the wake of the Franciscan mission system.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781496248268
ISBN-10: 1496248260
Pagini: 340
Ilustrații: 9 illustrations, 6 photographs, 5 maps, 4 tables, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Nebraska
Colecția University of Nebraska Press
Locul publicării:United States

Notă biografică

Lee M. Panich is a professor of anthropology at Santa Clara University. He is the author of Narratives of Persistence: Indigenous Negotiations of Colonialism in Alta and Baja California and is the coeditor of several volumes, including most recently Archaeologies of Indigenous PresenceGustavo Flores is a lecturer of anthropology at San Jose State University.

Cuprins

List of Illustrations
Introduction
Chapter 1. Missions
Chapter 2. Freedom
Chapter 3. Labor
Chapter 4. Land
Chapter 5. Property
Chapter 6. Rebellion
Chapter 7. Justice
Bibliography

Recenzii

“With implications far beyond the region it covers, We Will Receive Justice opens up new ways of understanding the lives of Indigenous Californians in the mid-nineteenth century. Lee Panich and Gustavo Flores show how, at a time when the missions were in ruins and settler colonialism was yet to take root in Mexican California, California Natives imagined new futures for themselves in defiance of powerful missionaries and land-hungry colonists. Anchored in Native voice and historical and anthropological methods, We Will Receive Justice is mandatory reading for all who wish to understand Native survivance on the California frontier.”—Steven W. Hackel, professor of history at the University of California, Riverside

“I’ve found myself moved by the exploration of issues like liberty and rebellion, which are woven throughout this remarkable book by two authors whose insight pierces the heart of our tribe’s human struggle to exist and be. The deep research by Lee Panich and Gustavo Flores is illuminating. So much of the history that they uncover reflects today on our tribe’s spirit of resistance against oppression. For us, this text resonates powerfully with our journey to reclaim our ancestral lands, to protect our culture, and to assert our sovereignty. Their masterful articulation of liberty as both a personal and collective aspiration inspires us, capturing the fire of defiance that burns in those who challenge unjust systems. The stories and struggles of our ancestors are, in many ways, beacons through which we can see and appreciate the resilience of communities who rise against erasure. This history is not over yet.  Today, our people are locked in a fight for recognition and justice. This text is a testament to the struggle of our people to be free, rendered with such clarity and passion that it stirs the soul. I am grateful for this brilliant work, which not only educates but also kindles hope and determination in all who seek freedom.”—Charlene Nijmeh, chairwoman of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe of the San Francisco Bay Area

Lee Panich and Gustavo Flores’s groundbreaking book centers Indigenous agency and pushes beyond the broad demographic studies that characterize studies of this era to provide an intimate look at the Indigenous communities of Missions Santa Clara and San José, and their fight for justice and survival, through the colonial violence of the Spanish, Mexican, and American eras. We Will Receive Justice sheds light on a history that is badly in need of illumination, drawing on overlooked archives, ethnographic testimonies, and oral histories to demonstrate how Indigenous peoples understood themselves and their own stories.”—Martin Rizzo-Martinez, author of We Are Not Animals: Indigenous Politics of Survival, Rebellion, and Reconstitution in Nineteenth-Century California

Descriere

Spanning from Mexican independence in 1821 to annexation by the United States in 1846, We Will Receive Justice explores how Native peoples of the San Francisco Bay Area navigated the collapse of the California mission system.