Family Networks in Colonial Louisiana: Evidence from Eighteenth-Century Parish Records, Yearbook of German-American Studies 50 (2015): 59–73. (peer reviewed) (original) (raw)
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This Lund University Press book should take a place in the front ranks of sources consulted for analysis and interpretation on French Illinois and the Illinois Indian tribe. Zitomersky makes important theoretical contributions, examining French colonialism in terms of its unique territorial organization. From the perspective of one who loves documents and documentary interpretations more than the theories built upon them, Zitomersky's study absolutely must be consulted by those studying Illinois Indians because this approach has forced him to attempt to gain exacting control of the details of population and settlement geography of the Illinois Indian tribe. The bulk of this book is, in fact, an exhaustive treatment of this subject alone. One would expect that this study mostly reworks well-plowed ground. The fact is, however, that Zitomersky has far outstripped all previous studies on this subject.