In this original and sensitive ethnography of frontier life,
Elizabeth Perkins recovers the rhythms of warfare, subsistence, and
cultural encounter that governed existence on the margins of
British America. Richly detailed,
Border Life captures the
intimate perceptive universe of the men and women who colonized
Kentucky and southern Ohio during the Revolutionary era.
In reconstructing the mental world of border inhabitants, Perkins
draws on a pioneering source in oral history. In the 1840s, the
Reverend John Dabney Shane conducted hundreds of interviews with
surviving western settlers, gathering their recollections on topics
ranging from food preparation to encounters with Native Americans.
Although Shane's interviews have long been hailed as a rich, if
complicated, source for western history, Perkins is the first
scholar to consider them critically, as texts for cultural
analysis.
Border Life also deepens our understanding of how ordinary
people struggled to make sense of their own lives within the stream
of history. Discovering a significant disjuncture between recorded
memory and written history in accounts of the early frontier,
Perkins shows how historians and popular authors reshaped the messy
complexities of remembered experience into heroic--and radically
simplified--conquest narratives.