New Worlds for All, Europeans, and the Remaking of Early America. By Colin
G. Calloway. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1997.
Colin G. Calloway effectively states to his readers that the Indians of the North America were not just pushed aside by the Europeans who had begun exploring and immigrating in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The Europeans had influenced them, but they also influenced the Europeans. The Indians and the Europeans each shaped the so-called New World into what it is today known as America. Neither one of them could have predicted that they would have created such a powerful country. "This short book explores the new worlds that Indians and Europeans created together in early America and considers how conquest changed conquered people and conquerors alike." Throughout this short book, Calloway retells the stories
and the culture they both made to create early America (178, xiii-xiv).
In conclusion, Calloway successfully states the ways in which the Europeans and the Indians became new people from being around one another. The way he got his point across was that he allowed you to encounter all the changes. He made it very clear on what he was trying to say, I understood what he was trying to say all throughout the short book, very well written.
Calloway states how Europeans did not come to America to create America or to mold themselves into something other than Indians. They came over here to make a New World like the home they had left and make it better. Neither the Europeans nor the Indians were looking for change, nor did they want to abandon their heritage and become like a person that is so different from their own. The two cultures were forced
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