
Wrecked
Description
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Winner of a 2026 Pacific Northwest Book Award, Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association
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 that was destroyed 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.
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Person
Coll Thrush is professor of history at the University of British Columbia. He is author of Native Seattle: Histories from the Crossing-Over Place and Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire.
Content
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Epigraphs
- Contents
- Preface. A View from the Shore
- Introduction. A Fragile Machine / What We Talk about When We Talk about Shipwreck
- One. Everything That Comes Ashore Is Mine / A Pacific World Wrecks on an Indigenous Coast
- Two. Troublous Days / Colonial Fear and the Wakes of Maritime Violence
- Three. All Lost / The Making of a Settler Graveyard
- Four. The Green Fire of Emily G. Reed / Shipwreck Debris and the Construction of Coastal Culture
- Five. Out of Time / Ghost Ships of the Anthropocene
- Six. Neahkahnie's Archive / Wrecklore and the Bedrock of the Past
- Epilogue. The Wreck at the Edge of the World
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
- Series Page
- About the Author
- Back Cover
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