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To Be Men of Business: The Origins of Chickasaw Capitalism, 1700-1840 - Hardcover

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by David Andrew Nichols (Author)

Capitalism during the American colonial era was an economic system known primarily for dispossessing and exploiting Indigenous peoples. Some Indigenous nations, however, learned to use its primary features--wealth accumulation, private investment, and a globalized marketplace--to strengthen their families and defend their communities. The Chickasaws of the American Southeast exemplified these Indigenous capitalists.

To Be Men of Business examines the Chickasaw Nation's education in business and commerce, adaptation to a capitalist economy, and survival by maneuvering in the market economy established by settlers in North America. The Chickasaw Nation, initially a subsistence-oriented society, first entered the Atlantic market economy in the late 1600s through the Native American slave trade, when Chickasaw men's participation in slave raiding brought significant material gains and introduced their families to European goods. Over the course of two hundred years, Chickasaw families adopted aspects of capitalist culture while retaining elements of their own foundational culture norms.

The Chickasaw Nation's economic history provides a case study of how a noncapitalist society integrated itself into an increasingly capitalist atmosphere. Amid this economic shift, Chickasaw leaders worked to protect their people from predatory white traders and officials by sending their children to mission schools for English literacy and resisting efforts by the U.S government to gain land cessions from the Chickasaw people. Business and commerce literacy also allowed the Chickasaw Nation some control over their forced migration, and the protective economic institutions Chickasaw leaders established became the basis for a revived Chickasaw national identity following removal from their homeland.

Author Biography

David Andrew Nichols is a professor of history and Native American and Indigenous studies and Donald Carmony Chair of History at Indiana University. He is the author of, most recently, Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600-1870 and Engines of Diplomacy: Indian Trading Factories and the Negotiation of American Empire. He is the editor of Indiana Magazine of History.

Number of Pages: 250
Dimensions: 0.75 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: April 01, 2026
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by David Andrew Nichols (Author)

Capitalism during the American colonial era was an economic system known primarily for dispossessing and exploiting Indigenous peoples. Some Indigenous nations, however, learned to use its primary features--wealth accumulation, private investment, and a globalized marketplace--to strengthen their families and defend their communities. The Chickasaws of the American Southeast exemplified these Indigenous capitalists.

To Be Men of Business examines the Chickasaw Nation's education in business and commerce, adaptation to a capitalist economy, and survival by maneuvering in the market economy established by settlers in North America. The Chickasaw Nation, initially a subsistence-oriented society, first entered the Atlantic market economy in the late 1600s through the Native American slave trade, when Chickasaw men's participation in slave raiding brought significant material gains and introduced their families to European goods. Over the course of two hundred years, Chickasaw families adopted aspects of capitalist culture while retaining elements of their own foundational culture norms.

The Chickasaw Nation's economic history provides a case study of how a noncapitalist society integrated itself into an increasingly capitalist atmosphere. Amid this economic shift, Chickasaw leaders worked to protect their people from predatory white traders and officials by sending their children to mission schools for English literacy and resisting efforts by the U.S government to gain land cessions from the Chickasaw people. Business and commerce literacy also allowed the Chickasaw Nation some control over their forced migration, and the protective economic institutions Chickasaw leaders established became the basis for a revived Chickasaw national identity following removal from their homeland.

Author Biography

David Andrew Nichols is a professor of history and Native American and Indigenous studies and Donald Carmony Chair of History at Indiana University. He is the author of, most recently, Peoples of the Inland Sea: Native Americans and Newcomers in the Great Lakes Region, 1600-1870 and Engines of Diplomacy: Indian Trading Factories and the Negotiation of American Empire. He is the editor of Indiana Magazine of History.

Number of Pages: 250
Dimensions: 0.75 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: April 01, 2026

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To Be Men of Business: The Origins of Chickasaw Capitalism, 1700-1840 - Hardcover

To Be Men of Business: The Origins of Chickasaw Capitalism, 1700-1840 - Hardcover

$194.20
To Be Men of Business: The Origins of Chickasaw Capitalism, 1700-1840 - Hardcover

To Be Men of Business: The Origins of Chickasaw Capitalism, 1700-1840 - Hardcover

$194.20
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