In this chapter, Richter uses three stories to talk about how the Native Americans dealt with the bringing in of material items, and how they tried to bring Europeans into their world on their terms. The story of “Pocahontas” showed things were different in the aspect that the Native Americans never harmed the Europeans. They captured John Smith and some of his men, but their lives were never in danger. The Native Americans tried to find peace with the Europeans; however, they went and captured Pocahontas. Richter wrote that it might have been possible for the Native Americans to assimilate into European culture, and they might have been able to have the Europeans not tried to force the Native Americans into having the same culture as …show more content…
The Native Americas and Euro-Americans history depended on the other from the first time the Europeans stepped foot in America; they grew to depend on each other for trade. The Native Americans sometimes made agreements with several groups of Europeans and took advantage of them. The Europeans often depended on the Native Americans to learn how to survive off the land. The two groups often fought with each other. Anything one group did, directly effected the other