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1

Wishart, David M. « Evidence of Surplus Production in the Cherokee Nation Prior to Removal ». Journal of Economic History 55, no 1 (mars 1995) : 120–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700040596.

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Debate over the level of economic development for the Eastern Cherokees was heated during the 1830s. Removal opponents argued that the Cherokees had adopted white agricultural methods, whereas advocates of removal maintained that little evidence of progress existed. Removal advocates believed that Cherokee economic progress required that they be removed from contact with whites. This article examines the statistical record to show that a majority of Cherokee households produced surplus food before removal. The large number of Cherokee households producing surpluses before removal suggests the existence of significant rents to be transmitted to white farmers via the removal policy.
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2

Altman, Heidi M., et Thomas N. Belt. « Reading History : Cherokee History through a Cherokee Lens ». Native South 1, no 1 (2008) : 90–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/nso.0.0003.

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3

Thornton, Russell. « Nineteenth-Century Cherokee History ». American Sociological Review 50, no 1 (février 1985) : 124. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2095346.

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4

Owens, Robert M., et Robert J. Conley. « The Cherokee Nation : A History ». Journal of Southern History 72, no 4 (1 novembre 2006) : 912. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27649239.

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Myers, Robert A., et Robert J. Conley. « The Cherokee Nation : A History ». Arkansas Historical Quarterly 65, no 2 (2006) : 175. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40038299.

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6

McLoughlin, William G., John R. Finger et James W. Parins. « Cherokee Americans : The Eastern Band of Cherokees in the Twentieth Century ». Ethnohistory 39, no 4 (1992) : 514. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/481967.

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Mize, Jamie Myers. « “To Conclude on a General Union” Masculinity, the Chickamauga, and Pan-Indian Alliances in the Revolutionary Era ». Ethnohistory 68, no 3 (1 juillet 2021) : 429–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-8940515.

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Abstract Utilizing gender as a lens for understanding the political decisions of Cherokee men in the Revolutionary era, this article examines the evolution of Cherokee manhood as Cherokee men renegotiated their masculinity in the wake of colonial pressures. A group known as the Chickamauga sought to maintain historic expressions of manhood and developed several strategies to do so. In particular, Chickamauga men worked tirelessly to establish pan-Indian alliances and to unite military efforts against American settlers. Amid these efforts, the warrior-diplomat emerged as a masculine ideal in Cherokee society.
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8

Shoemaker, N. « Signs of Cherokee Culture : Sequoyah's Syllabary in Eastern Cherokee Life ». Ethnohistory 51, no 3 (1 juillet 2004) : 669–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-51-3-669.

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9

Reed, J. L. « Deconstructing the Cherokee Nation : Town, Region, and Nation among Eighteenth-Century Cherokees ». Ethnohistory 60, no 1 (1 janvier 2013) : 160–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-1642833.

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10

Walker, Willard, et James Sarbaugh. « The Early History of the Cherokee Syllabary ». Ethnohistory 40, no 1 (1993) : 70. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/482159.

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11

Hoffman, Michael P., et William L. Anderson. « Cherokee Removal : Before and After ». Arkansas Historical Quarterly 51, no 2 (1992) : 179. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40025852.

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12

Moulton, Gary E., et William L. Anderson. « Cherokee Removal : Before and After. » Journal of Southern History 59, no 1 (février 1993) : 129. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2210366.

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13

Smithers, Gregory D. « A Cherokee Epic : Kermit Hunter’s Unto These Hills and the Mythologizing of Cherokee History ». Native South 8, no 1 (2015) : 1–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/nso.2015.0000.

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14

Rodning, Christopher B. « Mounds, Myths, and Cherokee Townhouses in Southwestern North Carolina ». American Antiquity 74, no 4 (octobre 2009) : 627–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000273160004899x.

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This paper explores the role of public architecture in anchoring Cherokee communities to particular points within the southern Appalachian landscape in the wake of European contact in North America. Documentary evidence about Cherokee public structures known as townhouses demonstrates that they were settings for a variety of events related to public life in Cherokee towns, and that there were a variety of symbolic meanings associated with them. Archaeological evidence of Cherokee townhouses—especially the sequence of six townhouses at the Coweeta Creek site in southwestern North Carolina—demonstrates an emphasis on continuity in the placement and alignment of public architecture through time. Building and rebuilding these public structures in place, and the placement of burials within these architectural spaces, created enduring attachments between Cherokee towns and the places in which they lived, in the midst of the geopolitical instability created by European contact in eastern North America.
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15

Bens, Jonas. « When the Cherokee Became Indigenous : Cherokee Nation v. Georgia and its Paradoxical Legalities ». Ethnohistory 65, no 2 (1 avril 2018) : 247–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-4383718.

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16

Kilarski, Marcin. « Cherokee Classificatory Verbs ». Historiographia Linguistica 36, no 1 (6 avril 2009) : 39–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/hl.36.1.03kil.

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Summary This article examines the role played by the Cherokee verbs for ‘wash’, first cited in 1820 by John Pickering (1777–1848), in studies which postulated lexical redundancy and the lack of generic terms in ‘primitive’ languages. Like the more well-known “Eskimo words for ‘snow’”, the Cherokee verbs provide an example of misanalysis of the complexity of polysynthetic morphology and negligence in the presentation of data from ‘exotic’ languages. In addition, the accounts of the verbs for ‘wash’ demonstrate a misinterpretation of the function of the Cherokee classificatory verbs. In the article the author traces the description of the verbs in 19th and 20th century studies in linguistics, psychology, sociology and anthropology, with the aim of illustrating the claims made about the lexical and grammatical properties of American Indian languages, and the cognitive and cultural characteristics of the American Indians, in particular their inability to express abstract notions and the absence of moral and social values.
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17

Evans, William McKee, et John R. Finger. « Cherokee Americans : The Eastern Band of Cherokees in the Twentieth Century. Indians of the Southeast. » Journal of Southern History 59, no 1 (février 1993) : 159. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2210391.

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18

Sheehan, Bernard W., et William L. Anderson. « Cherokee Removal : Before and after ». Ethnohistory 40, no 1 (1993) : 110. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/482166.

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19

Agnew, Brad, et William L. Anderson. « Cherokee Removal : Before and After. » Journal of American History 79, no 1 (juin 1992) : 262. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2078524.

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20

Simek, Jan F., Beau Duke Carroll, Julie Reed, Alan Cressler, Tom Belt, Wayna Adams et Mary White. « The Red Bird River Shelter (15CY52) Revisited : The Archaeology of the Cherokee Syllabary and of Sequoyah in Kentucky ». American Antiquity 84, no 2 (12 mars 2019) : 302–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.89.

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This article reanalyzes petroglyphs from the Red Bird River Shelter (15CY52), a small sandstone shelter in Kentucky. In 2009–2013, it was claimed that some of the carvings at the site represented the earliest known examples of Cherokee Syllabary writing, dating to the first two decades of the nineteenth century. It was also suggested that Sequoyah, the Cherokee artist and intellectual who invented the Cherokee Syllabary in the early nineteenth century, had made these petroglyph versions during a visit to see his white paternal family living in Kentucky. Our reanalysis categorically contests this interpretation. We do not see Cherokee Syllabary writing at Red Bird River Shelter. We do not believe that historical evidence supports the notion that Sequoyah had white relatives in Kentucky whom he visited there at the time required for him to have authored those petroglyphs. We also believe that this account misrepresents Sequoyah's Cherokee identity by tying him to white relatives for whom there is no historical warrant. We argue that the Red Bird River Shelter is a significant precontact petroglyph site with several panels of line-and-groove petroglyphs overlain by numerous examples of modern graffiti, but there is no Sequoyan Syllabary inscription there.
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21

Usner, Daniel H., et William G. McLoughlin. « Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic ». Western Historical Quarterly 19, no 4 (novembre 1988) : 455. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/968329.

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22

Perdue, Theda, et William G. McLoughlin. « Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic. » Journal of Southern History 54, no 1 (février 1988) : 107. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2208531.

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23

Otto, Paul, Theda Perdue et Michael D. Green. « The Cherokee Removal : A Brief History with Documents ». Western Historical Quarterly 27, no 4 (1996) : 521. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/970543.

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24

Hill, Sarah H., Theda Perdue et Michael D. Green. « The Cherokee Removal : A Brief History with Documents ». Journal of the Early Republic 16, no 2 (1996) : 338. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3124271.

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25

Gary C. Cheek Jr. « The Cherokee Nation : A History (review) ». American Indian Quarterly 32, no 4 (2008) : 536–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aiq.0.0028.

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26

Kurtz, Royce, Theda Perdue, Michael D. Green et John E. Worth. « The Cherokee Removal : A Brief History with Documents ». Ethnohistory 44, no 2 (1997) : 405. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/483382.

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27

Hill, Sarah H. « Weaving History : Cherokee Baskets from the Springplace Mission ». William and Mary Quarterly 53, no 1 (janvier 1996) : 115. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2946826.

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28

Stambaugh, Michael C., Richard P. Guyette et Joseph Marschall. « Fire History in the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma ». Human Ecology 41, no 5 (23 février 2013) : 749–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10745-013-9571-2.

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29

Tankersley, Kenneth Barnett, et William Rex Weeks. « Red Bird and Sequoyah : A Reply to Simek et al. » American Antiquity 85, no 2 (avril 2020) : 383–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.4.

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Red Bird was a Cherokee murdered at the Red Bird River Petroglyph site (15Cy51) and buried at the Red Bird River Rockshelter (15Cy52) during the late eighteenth century, where he left an important record of traditional petroglyphs. His legacy is key to understanding the origins of Sequoyah's Cherokee Syllabary and its relationship to rock art. Personal testimonies of Red Bird's descendants are supported by primary documents and archaeological evidence, including the letters of Sequoyah's maternal uncle, John Watts, and prototypes of Cherokee Syllabary characters engraved at 15Cy52 in 1808, when members of Sequoyah's matrilineal family resided nearby.
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30

Heck, William P., Ralph Keen et Michael R. Wilds. « Structuring the Cherokee Nation Justice System : The History and Function of the Cherokee Nation Marshal Service ». Criminal Justice Policy Review 12, no 1 (mars 2001) : 26–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0887403401012001002.

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On July 4, 1986, a Cherokee tribal member was shot in the leg and arrested by a deputy in Adair County, Oklahoma. In a subsequent civil action, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that absent a statutory grant of authority by Congress or consent from the tribe itself, Oklahoma law enforcement officers have no criminal jurisdiction “in Indian country” unless the crime is committed by a non-Indian against another non-Indian or the crime is a victimless crime committed by a non-Indian. Realizing that they were no longer protected by the state, the Cherokee Nation responded by creating its own Marshal Service. This article describes the evolution of that agency, checkerboard jurisdiction, and the need for cross deputization. In particular, the article addresses the recent political tribal crisis that almost devastated the newly formed Marshal Service and the tribe's current struggle to regain stability in the politically charged aftermath.
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31

Bishop, Charles A., et William G. McLoughlin. « The Cherokee Ghost Dance ». Journal of the Early Republic 5, no 4 (1985) : 560. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3123081.

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32

Finger, John R., et William G. McLoughlin. « Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic ». Ethnohistory 36, no 2 (1989) : 203. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/482280.

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33

Purvis, R. S. « Delaware Tribe in a Cherokee Nation ». Ethnohistory 58, no 2 (1 avril 2011) : 329–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-1163091.

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34

Kawashima, Yasuhide, et William G. McLoughlin. « Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic ». Journal of American History 74, no 4 (mars 1988) : 1336. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1894439.

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35

Gragson, Ted L., et Paul V. Bolstad. « A Local Analysis of Early-Eighteenth-Century Cherokee Settlement ». Social Science History 31, no 3 (2007) : 435–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s014555320001381x.

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Results of an original analysis of Cherokee town placement and population c. 1721 are presented. Period and contemporary information were analyzed using local statistics to produce multivalued, mappable characterizations of the intensity of the processes of town placement and population. The analysis focuses on the scale and the space in which these processes took place among the Cherokee in order to open the way for examining the legacy of human-induced environmental change in southern Appalachia.
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36

Reese, Linda W. « Cherokee Freedwomen in Indian Territory, 1863-1890 ». Western Historical Quarterly 33, no 3 (2002) : 273. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4144838.

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37

Denson, Andrew, et Clarissa W. Confer. « The Cherokee Nation in the Civil War ». Journal of Southern History 74, no 4 (1 novembre 2008) : 973. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/27650345.

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38

VanDerwarker, Amber M., Jon B. Marcoux et Kandace D. Hollenbach. « Farming and Foraging at the Crossroads : The Consequences of Cherokee and European Interaction Through the Late Eighteenth Century ». American Antiquity 78, no 1 (janvier 2013) : 68–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.7183/0002-7316.78.1.68.

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AbstractThe material remains of daily subsistence within Cherokee communities reflect strategies that households enacted while adapting to disruptions associated with European colonialism. Plant subsistence remains dating from the late Pre-Contact period through the end of the Revolutionary War (A.D. 1300–1783) reveal how Cherokee food producers! collectors fed their families as they navigated an increasingly uncertain landscape. Framing our analysis in terms of risk mitigation and future-discounting concepts from human behavioral ecology, we argue that Cherokee households responded to increasing risk and uncertainty by shifting towards subsistence strategies that had more immediate rewards. Although Cherokee plant subsistence remains exhibit continuity in how people farmed and foraged, our study shows that households made strategic decisions to alter their food production and collection with respect to looming uncertainty. Archaeobotanical analysis from multiple sites spanning the Colonial period (ca. A.D. 1670–1783) reveal a stepwise process of declining maize production, increased foraging, and overall diversification of the plant diet. This case underscores the relevance of concepts from human behavioral ecology to complex colonial situations by demonstrating that strategies of risk prevention and mitigation have applicability beyond ecological factors.
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39

Robbins, Rockey, Sharla Robbins et Wiley Harwell. « Relationship Resonances in the Learning Process as Found in Stevenson’s Kidnapped and the Cherokee Story, The Gambler ». Study and Scrutiny : Research on Young Adult Literature 4, no 1 (2 novembre 2020) : 29–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.15763/issn.2376-5275.2020.4.1.29-51.

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In a time of racial division, this critical study explores both the history and possibility of reconciliation of, not only the complicated relationship between the Scottish and Cherokee peoples, but also within an analysis of, two stories: Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson and the traditional Cherokee story, The Gambler. Using Object Relations Theory, along with the concept of Resonance, readers will find connections between the main characters, David Balfour and Cooch, as well as implications further analysis and the relationships teachers may establish in the classroom.
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40

Cheek, Gary C. « The Cherokee Removal : A Brief History with Documents (review) ». American Indian Quarterly 29, no 1 (2005) : 313–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aiq.2005.0038.

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41

Moulton, Gary E., et William G. McLoughlin. « Cherokee Renascence in the New Republic ». American Historical Review 93, no 3 (juin 1988) : 769. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1868249.

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42

Satz, Ronald N., Theda Perdue et Elias Boudinot. « Cherokee Editor : The Writings of Elias Boudinot ». Ethnohistory 33, no 2 (1986) : 238. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/481789.

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43

Stremlau, R. « The Cherokee Syllabary : Writing the People's Perseverance ». Ethnohistory 60, no 1 (1 janvier 2013) : 162–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-1816247.

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44

Hauptman, L. M. « The Cherokee Nation in the Civil War. » Ethnohistory 55, no 2 (1 avril 2008) : 344–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2007-072.

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45

Cushman, E. « The Cherokee Syllabary from Script to Print ». Ethnohistory 57, no 4 (1 octobre 2010) : 625–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-2010-039.

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46

Nash, Susan. « Signature Stories : Helen Timberlake‘s Petition to George III ». Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90, no 2 (septembre 2014) : 185–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/bjrl.90.2.11.

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This article explores the process of female self-fashioning in two previously neglected petitions dated 1786-87 by using signatures to analyse their texts and construct their contexts. In them, Helen Timberlake revises the account of frontier and Cherokee life her husband, Henry Timberlake, had published in his Memoirs (1765). Her intense maternal voice, focused on loss, entangles her history with that of the Cherokee chief Ostenaco, providing a grounded but often untrue narrative of shared family life and a persona tailored to evoke a history intertwined with that of George III. This article explores the mystery of Helen Timberlakes origins, while connecting the rhetoric of her petitions to the gendered emergence of sentimentalism, narratives of Indian captivity, and the historiography of ‘the Atlantic’.
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47

Mulroy, Kevin, et William L. Anderson. « Cherokee Removal : Before and After ». Journal of the Early Republic 11, no 4 (1991) : 575. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3123375.

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48

Jacobs, Margaret, et Theda Perdue. « Cherokee Women : Gender and Culture Change, 1700-1835. » Journal of Southern History 66, no 1 (février 2000) : 105. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2587442.

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Murphy, Lucy Eldersveld, et Theda Perdue. « Cherokee Women : Gender and Culture Change, 1700-1835 ». Western Historical Quarterly 30, no 2 (1999) : 218. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/970499.

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50

Groat, Bridget. « Voices of Cherokee Women. By Carolyn Ross Johnston ». Oral History Review 44, no 2 (2017) : 405–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ohr/ohx056.

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