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10. Intelligibility or incommensurability?
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Daniel K. Richter
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- 1. Making law intelligible in comparative context 1
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Part I. Mis-dialogues, code switching, and mixing languages of law
- 2. Dialoguing with barbarians what natives said and how Europeans responded in late- seventeenth- and eighteenth- century Portuguese America 61
- 3. defending and defrauding the Indians: john wompas, legal hybridity, and the sale of Indian land 89
- 4. “since we came out of this ground”: Iroquois legal arguments at the treaty of Lancaster 118
- 5. “ynuvaciones malas e rreprouadas”: seeking justice in early colonial pueblos de indios 151
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Part II. At the boundaries of differing conceptions of justice
- 6. “darling Indians” and “natural lords”: Virginia’s tributary regime and Florida’s republic of Indians in the seventeenth century 183
- 7. Covering blood and graves: murder and law on imperial margins 213
- 8. “sovereignty has lost its rights”: liberal experiments and indigenous citizenship in new Granada, 1810– 1819 238
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Part III. Concluding perspectives
- 9. In defense of ignorance: frameworks for legal politics in the Atlantic world 273
- 10. Intelligibility or incommensurability? 291
- Acknowledgments 307
- About the editors 309
- About the contributors 311
- Index 315
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- 1. Making law intelligible in comparative context 1
-
Part I. Mis-dialogues, code switching, and mixing languages of law
- 2. Dialoguing with barbarians what natives said and how Europeans responded in late- seventeenth- and eighteenth- century Portuguese America 61
- 3. defending and defrauding the Indians: john wompas, legal hybridity, and the sale of Indian land 89
- 4. “since we came out of this ground”: Iroquois legal arguments at the treaty of Lancaster 118
- 5. “ynuvaciones malas e rreprouadas”: seeking justice in early colonial pueblos de indios 151
-
Part II. At the boundaries of differing conceptions of justice
- 6. “darling Indians” and “natural lords”: Virginia’s tributary regime and Florida’s republic of Indians in the seventeenth century 183
- 7. Covering blood and graves: murder and law on imperial margins 213
- 8. “sovereignty has lost its rights”: liberal experiments and indigenous citizenship in new Granada, 1810– 1819 238
-
Part III. Concluding perspectives
- 9. In defense of ignorance: frameworks for legal politics in the Atlantic world 273
- 10. Intelligibility or incommensurability? 291
- Acknowledgments 307
- About the editors 309
- About the contributors 311
- Index 315