History Maritime History & Piracy
Wrecked
Unsettling Histories from the Graveyard of the Pacific
- Publisher
- University of Washington Press
- Initial publish date
- May 2025
- Category
- Maritime History & Piracy, Pacific Northwest, Indigenous Studies
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780295753768
- Publish Date
- May 2025
- List Price
- $41.00
Add it to your shelf
Where to buy it
Description
A provocative retelling of shipwreck tales from the Northwest Coast
The Northwest Coast of North America is a treacherous place. Unforgiving coastlines, powerful currents, unpredictable weather, and features such as the notorious Columbia River bar have resulted in more than two thousand shipwrecks, earning the coastal areas of Oregon, Washington, and Vancouver Island the moniker “Graveyard of the Pacific.? Beginning with a Spanish galleon that came ashore in northern Oregon in 1693 and continuing into the recent past, Wrecked includes stories of many vessels that met their fate along the rugged coast and the meanings made of these events by both Indigenous and settler survivors and observers.
Commemorated in museums, historical markers, folklore, place-names, and the remains of the ships themselves, the shipwrecks have created a rich archive. Whether in the form of a fur-trading schooner beached in 1811, a passenger liner lost in 1906, or an almost-empty tanker broken on the shore in 1999, shipwrecks on the Northwest Coast opens up conversations about colonialism and Indigenous persistence. Thrush's retelling of shipwreck tales highlights the ways in which the three central myths of settler colonialism?the disappearance of Indigenous people, the control of an endlessly abundant nature, and the idea that the past would stay past?proved to be untrue. As a critical cultural history of this iconic element of the region, Wrecked demonstrates how the history of shipwrecks reveals the fraught and unfinished business of colonization on the Northwest Coast.
About the author
Coll Thrush is professor of history at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of two books: Native Seattle: Histories from the Crossing-Over Place (University of Washington Press, 2007), and Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire (Yale, 2016). He is also the coeditor of Phantom Past, Indigenous Presence: Native Ghosts in North American Culture and History (University of Nebraska Press, 2011). He serves as a series editor for the University of Washington Press's Indigenous Confluences series.
Other titles by
Native Alienation
Spiritual Conquest and the Violence of California Missions
Refusing Settler Domesticity
Native Women's Labor and Resistance in the Bay Area Outing Program
Unrecognized in California
Federal Acknowledgment and the San Luis Rey Band of Mission Indians
Settler Cannabis
From Gold Rush to Green Rush in Indigenous Northern California
We Are Dancing for You
Native Feminisms and the Revitalization of Women's Coming-of-Age Ceremonies
Power in the Telling
Grand Ronde, Warm Springs, and Intertribal Relations in the Casino Era
Native Seattle
Histories from the Crossing-Over Place