Denise I. Bossy's Publications
Books, Book Chapters, Articles, and Book Reviews written by Dr. Denise I. Bossy
Dr. Bossy is an Associate Professor of History at the University of North Florida and an expert in the Native South, Early America, and Public Indigenous History.
Books
The Yamasee Indians: From Florida to South Carolina (2018)
Edited by Denise I. Bossy
Book Chapters
Yamasee Mobility: Mississippian Roots, Seventeenth-Century Strategies
In Contact, Colonialism, and Native Communities in the Southeastern United States (2020)
Negotiating Slavery and Empire: Yamasee Indians in the Early Southeast
In European Empires in the American South: Colonial and Environmental Encounters (2017)
The Making of a Militaristic Slaving Society: The Chickasaws and the Colonial Indian Slave Trade
In Indian Slavery in Colonial America (2009)
Articles
Matters of Size: Petites Nations, Slavery, and Coalescence in the Gulf South's Overlapping Shatter Zones
The William and Mary Quarterly (October 2023)
The South's Other Slavery: Recent Research on Indian Slavery
Native South (2016)
Spiritual Diplomacy, the Yamasees, and the Society for the Propogation of the Gospel: Reinterpreting Prince George's Eighteenth-Century Voyage to England
Early American Studies (April 2014)
Godin & Co.: Charleston Merchants and the Indian Trade, 1674-1715
The South Carolina Historical Magazine (April 2013)
Book Reviews
Before the Pioneers: Indians, Settlers, and the Founding of Miami by Andrew K. Frank
Journal of American Ethnic History (Fall 2018)
Shattering Together, Merging Apart: Colonialism, Violence, and the Remaking of the Native South (Books Review)
The William and Mary Quarterly (October 2014)
Slavery in Indian Country: The Changing Face of Captivity in Early America by Christina Snyder
The Journal of Southern History (November 2011)
Peace Came in the Form of a Woman: Indians and Spaniards in the Texas Borderlands by Juliana Barr
Ethnohistory (March 2011)
Epidemics and Enslavement: Biological Catastrophe in the Native Southeast, 1492-1715 by Paul Kelton
Ethnohistory (January 2009)