First Peoples : A Documentary Survey of American Indian History
, by Calloway, Colin G.Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
- ISBN: 9780312453732 | 0312453736
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 10/31/2007
First Peoplesdistinctive approach to American Indian history has earned praise and admiration from its users. Created to fill the significant need for a survey text that acknowledges the diversity of Native peoples, respected scholar Colin G. Calloway provides a solid course foundation that still allows instructors to emphasize selected topics of interest to them and their students. The signature format ofFirst Peoplesstrikes the ideal balance between primary and secondary source material, combining narrative, written documents, and visual documents in each chapter.
Colin G. Calloway is a professor of history and Samson Occum Professor of Native American Studies at Dartmouth College. He served for two years as associate director of and editor at the D’Arcy McNickle Center for the History of the American Indian at the Newberry Library in Chicago and taught for seven years at the University of Wyoming. Professor Calloway has written many books on Native American history, including The Scratch of a Pen: 1763 and the Transformation of North America (2006); One Vast Winter Count: The Native American West Before Lewis and Clark (2003); and two books for the Bedford Series in History and Culture: Our Hearts Fell to the Ground: Plains Indians Views of How the West Was Lost (1996), and The World Turned Upside Down: Indian Voices from Early America (1994).
Note: Questions for Consideration precede every group of documents and follow every picture essay. Each chapter concludes with a list of Suggested Readings.
Introduction. American Indians In American History
Perspectives on the Past
America's Master Narrative
Indian History: A Shared Past
Working with Sources
A Note on Name Usage
1. American History Before Columbus
Determining What Came Before
Precontact Population
Creation Stories and Migration Theories
]The Kennewick Man Controversy
Glimpses of Precontact Societies
West Coast Affluence
Columbia Plateau Fishers
Great Basin Foragers
First Buffalo Hunters of the Plains
First Farmers of the Southwest
Farmers and Mound Builders of the Eastern Woodlands
Emerging Tribes and Confederacies
Seaborne Strangers
DOCUMENTS
A Navajo Emergence Story
Hastin Tlo'tse hee, The Beginning
Corn and Game, Men and Women in Cherokee Society
]Ka'nati and Selu
The Iroquois Great League of Peace
Chiefs of the Six Nations, The Laws of the Confederacy (1900)
PICTURE ESSAY Early American Towns and Cities
]Aerial Photograph of the Ruins
of Pueblo Bonito. Cliff Palace
at Mesa Verde. Taos Pueblo.
Bird's-Eye View of Cahokia Mounds, ca. AD 1100-1150.
]Cahokia Village Life. Indian Village of Secoton. Hochelaga.
2. The Invasions of America, 1492–1680
First Contacts and Enduring Images
Columbian Exchanges
Changing New World Landscapes
Biological Catastrophes
Indians Confront the Spanish
A Mission for Gold and God
Conquest of the Aztecs
Searching for Other Empires
North American Attempts to Colonize and Christianize
The Pueblo War for Independence
Indians Confront the French
Commerce and Conflict
Pelts and Priests
Indians Confront the English
Securing a Beachhead in Virginia
Making a New England
King Philip's War
DOCUMENTS
A Narrative of the De Soto Invasion
Rodrigo Rangel, Account of the Northern Conquest and Discovery of Hernando de Soto (c. 1546)
An Indian Explanation of the Pueblo Revolt
Declaration of the Indian Juan (1681)
Jesuits in New France
Jean de BrŽbeuf, The Mission to the Hurons (1635–37)
A Mi'kmaq Questions French ÒCivilizationÓ
]Chrestien LeClerq, ÒA Micmac Responds to the FrenchÓ (1677)
Two Views of King Philip
Increase Mather, From A Brief History of the Warr with the Indians in New England (1676)
William Apess, From ÒEulogy on King PhilipÓ (1836)
]PICTURE ESSAY Indian Images of the Invaders
]Invasion of Northwestern Mexico. Spaniards on Horseback.
]Wampum Belt Commemorating a Treaty of Friendship between the Delaware Indians and William Penn.
]Seneca Antler Comb with
an Effigy of a European.
]Haida Argillite Figure Group. The Last Supper.
3. Indians in Colonial and Revolutionary America, 1680–1783
Economic and Cultural Exchanges
Indians in Colonial Society
Colonists in Indian Societies
The Impact of the Fur Trade
The Cost of the Fur Trade
War and Diplomacy in Colonial America
The Language and Lessons of Diplomacy
Wars for America
Division within Tribal Communities
Captives Taken, Captives Returned
Indians and the American Revolution
Attempting to Draw a Line
Taking Sides
Peace Treaties
DOCUMENTS
Franciscans and Caddos in Texas
]Father Francisco Casanas de JŽsus Maria, Report from the Caddo Indians (1691)
An English Treaty and a Penobscot Response
]Treaty between the Abenaki Indians and the English at Casco Bay (1727)
]Loron Sauguaarum, An Account of Negotiations Leading to the Casco Bay Treaty, 1727
A Captive with the Senecas
Mary Jemison, A Narrative of Her Life (1824)
The Revolution Comes to the Cherokees
Henry Stuart, Report from Cherokee Country (1776)
PICTURE ESSAY Painting the Past: Indians in the Art of an Emerging Nation
Penn's Treaty with the Indians. The Abduction of Daniel Boone's Daughter by the Indians. The Death of Jane McCrea. The Last of Their Race.
4. American Indians and the New Nation, 1783–1838
The New Nation Expands
Developing an Indian Policy
Regulating an Indian — and a Land — Policy
Indians Confront Expansion
Building a United Defense
Accommodating and Resisting Change
The Last Phases of United Indian Resistance
Indian Removals
Roots of Removal Policy
The Cherokee Resistance
Implementing Removal
Surviving behind the Frontier
DOCUMENTS
The Treaty of Fort Finney with the Shawnees
Richard Butler, The Journal of General Richard Butler at the Treaty of Fort Finney (1786)
The Lewis and Clark Expedition
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, A Winter with the Mandans (1804–1805)
Foundations of Federal Indian Law and a Native Response
John Marshall, Cherokee Nation v. State of Georgia (1831) and Worcester v. Georgia 1832)
John Ross, Reactions to Worcester v. Georgia: Letter to Richard Taylor, John Baldridge, Sleeping Rabbit, Sicketowee, and Wahachee (April 28, 1832)
PICTURE ESSAY Indian Life on the Upper Missouri: A Catlin/Bodmer Portfolio
The Interior of the Hut of a Mandan Chief. Diagram of the Interior of an Earth Lodge. Mint, a Pretty Girl. Ptihn-Tak-Ochata, Dance of the Mandan Women. Pehriska-Ruhpa,Moennitarri Warrior, in the Costume of the Dog Danse.Mandeh-Pahchu, Mandan Man. Pigeon's Egg Head (The Light) Going to and Returning from Washington.
5. Defending the West, 1830–90
The Indian West before 1830
Horses Transform the Plains
Jostling for Position on the Plains
At the Confluence of Guns and Horses
Invaders from the East
The Ravages of Smallpox
]Ethnic Cleansing in Texas and California
Losing the West
Wars and Treaties, 1861–68
Battles for the Black Hills
Different Strategies for Survival
The End of Apache Resistance
Return of the Prophets
DOCUMENTS
Sixty Years of Kiowa History
The Dohasan Calendar (1832–92)
Protection and Exploitation in the State of California
]An Act for the Government and Protection of Indians (1850)
The Treaty of Fort Laramie and the Struggle for the Black Hills
Council with the BrulŽ Sioux, April 28, 1868
Council with the Oglala Sioux, May 24-25, 1868
Council with the Miniconjous, May 27, 1868
Treaty with the Sioux — BrulŽ, Oglala, Miniconjou, Yanktonai, Hunkpapa, Blackfeet, Cuthead, Two Kettle, Sans Arc, and Santee — and Arapaho, 1868
Chief Joseph's Plea for Freedom
Chief Joseph, ÒAn Indian's View of Indian AffairsÓ (1879)
PICTURE ESSAY The Battle of the Little Big Horn in Myth and History
The Death Struggle of General Custer. Custer's Last Fight. Custer's Last Stand. They Died with Their Boots On. Custer of the West. Little Big Man. Lakotas Fighting Custer's Command. Custer's Dead Cavalry.
6. ÒKill the Indian and Save the Man,Ó 1870s–1930
Americanizing the American Indian
Policies of Detribalization
Resistance Takes New Forms
The Dawes Allotment Act (1887)
Indian Territory Becomes Oklahoma
The Educational Assault on Indian Children
Removing Children from the Tribe
Life in the Schools
Surviving the Schools, Using the Education
The Two Worlds of Ohiyesa and Charles Eastman
A Changing World
ÒI Still LiveÓ: Indians in American Society
A New Generation of Leaders
Soldiers and Citizens
Indian Affairs on the Eve of the Great Depression
DOCUMENTS
Dismantling Tribes and Their Homelands
Merrill E. Gates, From the Seventeenth Annual Report of the Board of Indian Commissioners
An Indian View of the Indian Bureau
Carlos Montezuma, ÒWhat Indians Must DoÓ (1914)
Sioux School Experiences
Luther Standing Bear, ÒWhat a School Could Have Been EstablishedÓ (1933)
Zitkala-Ša, ÒThe Melancholy of Those Black DaysÓ (1921)
PICTURE ESSAY The Fort Marion Artists
Cheyenne Warrior Striking an Enemy. Gathering for a Dance. Courtship Scene. On the Parapet at Ft. Marion Next Day after Arrival. Distribution of Goods.
]Education of the Fort Marion Prisoners. Wohaw, Self-Portrait.
7. From Indian New Deal to Self-determination, 1930–1980
Shifting Policies and Indian Activism
John Collier and the Indian New Deal
The Indian Reorganization Act
Opposing and Disputing the IRA
Indians and World War II
Termination
Indian Claims Commission
Removing the Government's Trust Responsibilities
Relocation
Drowning Homelands
A Younger Generation Responds
Urban Indians
Rise of Indian Militancy
Siege at Wounded Knee
Legacies of Wounded Knee
Moving beyond Failed Policies
From Paternalism to Partnership
Sovereignty Goes to Court
The Struggle for Natural Resources: Black Mesa and Laguna Pueblo
DOCUMENTS
Two Views of the Indian Reorganization Act
John Collier, An ÒIndian Renaissance,Ó From the Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (1935)
Robert Burnette and John Koster, ÒA Blueprint for Elected TyrannyÓ (1974)
Indians in the Cities
Anonymous, Life in the City: Chicago (c. 1970)
Ignatia Broker, ÒBrought to a BrotherhoodÓ (1983)
Documents of Indian Militancy
Clyde Warrior, ÒWe Are Not Free,Ó from Testimony before the President's National Advisory Commission on Rural Poverty (1967)
Proclamation to the Great White Father and to All His People (1969)
]Mary Crow Dog, ÒI Would Have My Baby at Wounded KneeÓ (1991)
The Supreme Court and Tribal Sovereignty
Supreme Court of the United States, Oliphant v. Suquamish Tribe (1978)
PICTURE ESSAY Indian Artists Depict Twentieth Century Indian Life
]The Visit. Land of Enchantment. Reflections: Tribute to Our Iron Skywalkers. When Coyote Leaves the Reservation (A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Coyote). Osage with Van Gogh or Collector #5.
8. Nations Within A Nation: Indian Country Since 1980
Changes at the BIA
]Self-Rule and Self-Help
Numbers, Identities, and Images
Census 2000: A Profile of Indian America
Who Is an Indian?
ÒRecognizedÓ and ÒNonrecognizedÓ Tribes
Stereotypes Old and New
Choosing Homelands over Wastelands
Building Prosperity in Indian Country: Gaming, a Devil's Bargain?
Taking Back Education
Building Well Nations
Confronting Drugs and Alcohol
Balancing Ways of Healing
Repatriation
Indian America in the Twenty-First Century
DOCUMENTS
Indian Leadership for the Modern World
Vine Deloria, Jr., ÒThe Popularity of Being Indian: A New Trend in Contemporary Indian SocietyÓ (1984)
Wilma Mankiller, ÒReturning the BalanceÓ (1993)
Tribal Colleges: Indian Education for Indian People
The Carnegie Foundation, From Tribal Colleges: Shaping the Future of Native America (1989)
Playing Indian and Fighting Over Mascots
Tim Giago, Mascots, Spirituality, and Insensitivity (1991)
]S. L. Price, ÒThe Indian WarsÓ (2002)
A New Museum, A New Era?
]W. Richard West, Jr., Remarks on the Occasion of the Grand Opening Ceremony, National Museum of the American Indian (2004)
]PICTURE ESSAY History, Tradition, and Innovation in Contemporary Indian Art
]Manly Heart Woman Stealing
Back Horses.
]The Drinker.
]Pursuit of Civilization #4.
]When We Become Our Role
Models #2.
]Twinkle Twinkle Little Star Now I Know Who You Really Are.
]The End of Innocence.
]Indian Men Wear Shirts and Ties.
APPENDIX I: General Reference Works
APPENDIX II: Film Resources
] new to this edition
Introduction. American Indians In American History
Perspectives on the Past
America's Master Narrative
Indian History: A Shared Past
Working with Sources
A Note on Name Usage
1. American History Before Columbus
Determining What Came Before
Precontact Population
Creation Stories and Migration Theories
]The Kennewick Man Controversy
Glimpses of Precontact Societies
West Coast Affluence
Columbia Plateau Fishers
Great Basin Foragers
First Buffalo Hunters of the Plains
First Farmers of the Southwest
Farmers and Mound Builders of the Eastern Woodlands
Emerging Tribes and Confederacies
Seaborne Strangers
DOCUMENTS
A Navajo Emergence Story
Hastin Tlo'tse hee, The Beginning
Corn and Game, Men and Women in Cherokee Society
]Ka'nati and Selu
The Iroquois Great League of Peace
Chiefs of the Six Nations, The Laws of the Confederacy (1900)
PICTURE ESSAY Early American Towns and Cities
]Aerial Photograph of the Ruins
of Pueblo Bonito. Cliff Palace
at Mesa Verde. Taos Pueblo.
Bird's-Eye View of Cahokia Mounds, ca. AD 1100-1150.
]Cahokia Village Life. Indian Village of Secoton. Hochelaga.
2. The Invasions of America, 1492–1680
First Contacts and Enduring Images
Columbian Exchanges
Changing New World Landscapes
Biological Catastrophes
Indians Confront the Spanish
A Mission for Gold and God
Conquest of the Aztecs
Searching for Other Empires
North American Attempts to Colonize and Christianize
The Pueblo War for Independence
Indians Confront the French
Commerce and Conflict
Pelts and Priests
Indians Confront the English
Securing a Beachhead in Virginia
Making a New England
King Philip's War
DOCUMENTS
A Narrative of the De Soto Invasion
Rodrigo Rangel, Account of the Northern Conquest and Discovery of Hernando de Soto (c. 1546)
An Indian Explanation of the Pueblo Revolt
Declaration of the Indian Juan (1681)
Jesuits in New France
Jean de BrŽbeuf, The Mission to the Hurons (1635–37)
A Mi'kmaq Questions French ÒCivilizationÓ
]Chrestien LeClerq, ÒA Micmac Responds to the FrenchÓ (1677)
Two Views of King Philip
Increase Mather, From A Brief History of the Warr with the Indians in New England (1676)
William Apess, From ÒEulogy on King PhilipÓ (1836)
]PICTURE ESSAY Indian Images of the Invaders
]Invasion of Northwestern Mexico. Spaniards on Horseback.
]Wampum Belt Commemorating a Treaty of Friendship between the Delaware Indians and William Penn.
]Seneca Antler Comb with
an Effigy of a European.
]Haida Argillite Figure Group. The Last Supper.
3. Indians in Colonial and Revolutionary America, 1680–1783
Economic and Cultural Exchanges
Indians in Colonial Society
Colonists in Indian Societies
The Impact of the Fur Trade
The Cost of the Fur Trade
War and Diplomacy in Colonial America
The Language and Lessons of Diplomacy
Wars for America
Division within Tribal Communities
Captives Taken, Captives Returned
Indians and the American Revolution
Attempting to Draw a Line
Taking Sides
Peace Treaties
DOCUMENTS
Franciscans and Caddos in Texas
]Father Francisco Casanas de JŽsus Maria, Report from the Caddo Indians (1691)
An English Treaty and a Penobscot Response
]Treaty between the Abenaki Indians and the English at Casco Bay (1727)
]Loron Sauguaarum, An Account of Negotiations Leading to the Casco Bay Treaty, 1727
A Captive with the Senecas
Mary Jemison, A Narrative of Her Life (1824)
The Revolution Comes to the Cherokees
Henry Stuart, Report from Cherokee Country (1776)
PICTURE ESSAY Painting the Past: Indians in the Art of an Emerging Nation
Penn's Treaty with the Indians. The Abduction of Daniel Boone's Daughter by the Indians. The Death of Jane McCrea. The Last of Their Race.
4. American Indians and the New Nation, 1783–1838
The New Nation Expands
Developing an Indian Policy
Regulating an Indian — and a Land — Policy
Indians Confront Expansion
Building a United Defense
Accommodating and Resisting Change
The Last Phases of United Indian Resistance
Indian Removals
Roots of Removal Policy
The Cherokee Resistance
Implementing Removal
Surviving behind the Frontier
DOCUMENTS
The Treaty of Fort Finney with the Shawnees
Richard Butler, The Journal of General Richard Butler at the Treaty of Fort Finney (1786)
The Lewis and Clark Expedition
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, A Winter with the Mandans (1804–1805)
Foundations of Federal Indian Law and a Native Response
John Marshall, Cherokee Nation v. State of Georgia (1831) and Worcester v. Georgia 1832)
John Ross, Reactions to Worcester v. Georgia: Letter to Richard Taylor, John Baldridge, Sleeping Rabbit, Sicketowee, and Wahachee (April 28, 1832)
PICTURE ESSAY Indian Life on the Upper Missouri: A Catlin/Bodmer Portfolio
The Interior of the Hut of a Mandan Chief. Diagram of the Interior of an Earth Lodge. Mint, a Pretty Girl. Ptihn-Tak-Ochata, Dance of the Mandan Women. Pehriska-Ruhpa,Moennitarri Warrior, in the Costume of the Dog Danse.Mandeh-Pahchu, Mandan Man. Pigeon's Egg Head (The Light) Going to and Returning from Washington.
5. Defending the West, 1830–90
The Indian West before 1830
Horses Transform the Plains
Jostling for Position on the Plains
At the Confluence of Guns and Horses
Invaders from the East
The Ravages of Smallpox
]Ethnic Cleansing in Texas and California
Losing the West
Wars and Treaties, 1861–68
Battles for the Black Hills
Different Strategies for Survival
The End of Apache Resistance
Return of the Prophets
DOCUMENTS
Sixty Years of Kiowa History
The Dohasan Calendar (1832–92)
Protection and Exploitation in the State of California
]An Act for the Government and Protection of Indians (1850)
The Treaty of Fort Laramie and the Struggle for the Black Hills
Council with the BrulŽ Sioux, April 28, 1868
Council with the Oglala Sioux, May 24-25, 1868
Council with the Miniconjous, May 27, 1868
Treaty with the Sioux — BrulŽ, Oglala, Miniconjou, Yanktonai, Hunkpapa, Blackfeet, Cuthead, Two Kettle, Sans Arc, and Santee — and Arapaho, 1868
Chief Joseph's Plea for Freedom
Chief Joseph, ÒAn Indian's View of Indian AffairsÓ (1879)
PICTURE ESSAY The Battle of the Little Big Horn in Myth and History
The Death Struggle of General Custer. Custer's Last Fight. Custer's Last Stand. They Died with Their Boots On. Custer of the West. Little Big Man. Lakotas Fighting Custer's Command. Custer's Dead Cavalry.
6. ÒKill the Indian and Save the Man,Ó 1870s–1930
Americanizing the American Indian
Policies of Detribalization
Resistance Takes New Forms
The Dawes Allotment Act (1887)
Indian Territory Becomes Oklahoma
The Educational Assault on Indian Children
Removing Children from the Tribe
Life in the Schools
Surviving the Schools, Using the Education
The Two Worlds of Ohiyesa and Charles Eastman
A Changing World
ÒI Still LiveÓ: Indians in American Society
A New Generation of Leaders
Soldiers and Citizens
Indian Affairs on the Eve of the Great Depression
DOCUMENTS
Dismantling Tribes and Their Homelands
Merrill E. Gates, From the Seventeenth Annual Report of the Board of Indian Commissioners
An Indian View of the Indian Bureau
Carlos Montezuma, ÒWhat Indians Must DoÓ (1914)
Sioux School Experiences
Luther Standing Bear, ÒWhat a School Could Have Been EstablishedÓ (1933)
Zitkala-Ša, ÒThe Melancholy of Those Black DaysÓ (1921)
PICTURE ESSAY The Fort Marion Artists
Cheyenne Warrior Striking an Enemy. Gathering for a Dance. Courtship Scene. On the Parapet at Ft. Marion Next Day after Arrival. Distribution of Goods.
]Education of the Fort Marion Prisoners. Wohaw, Self-Portrait.
7. From Indian New Deal to Self-determination, 1930–1980
Shifting Policies and Indian Activism
John Collier and the Indian New Deal
The Indian Reorganization Act
Opposing and Disputing the IRA
Indians and World War II
Termination
Indian Claims Commission
Removing the Government's Trust Responsibilities
Relocation
Drowning Homelands
A Younger Generation Responds
Urban Indians
Rise of Indian Militancy
Siege at Wounded Knee
Legacies of Wounded Knee
Moving beyond Failed Policies
From Paternalism to Partnership
Sovereignty Goes to Court
The Struggle for Natural Resources: Black Mesa and Laguna Pueblo
DOCUMENTS
Two Views of the Indian Reorganization Act
John Collier, An ÒIndian Renaissance,Ó From the Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (1935)
Robert Burnette and John Koster, ÒA Blueprint for Elected TyrannyÓ (1974)
Indians in the Cities
Anonymous, Life in the City: Chicago (c. 1970)
Ignatia Broker, ÒBrought to a BrotherhoodÓ (1983)
Documents of Indian Militancy
Clyde Warrior, ÒWe Are Not Free,Ó from Testimony before the President's National Advisory Commission on Rural Poverty (1967)
Proclamation to the Great White Father and to All His People (1969)
]Mary Crow Dog, ÒI Would Have My Baby at Wounded KneeÓ (1991)
The Supreme Court and Tribal Sovereignty
Supreme Court of the United States, Oliphant v. Suquamish Tribe (1978)
PICTURE ESSAY Indian Artists Depict Twentieth Century Indian Life
]The Visit. Land of Enchantment. Reflections: Tribute to Our Iron Skywalkers. When Coyote Leaves the Reservation (A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Coyote). Osage with Van Gogh or Collector #5.
8. Nations Within A Nation: Indian Country Since 1980
Changes at the BIA
]Self-Rule and Self-Help
Numbers, Identities, and Images
Census 2000: A Profile of Indian America
Who Is an Indian?
ÒRecognizedÓ and ÒNonrecognizedÓ Tribes
Stereotypes Old and New
Choosing Homelands over Wastelands
Building Prosperity in Indian Country: Gaming, a Devil's Bargain?
Taking Back Education
Building Well Nations
Confronting Drugs and Alcohol
Balancing Ways of Healing
Repatriation
Indian America in the Twenty-First Century
DOCUMENTS
Indian Leadership for the Modern World
Vine Deloria, Jr., ÒThe Popularity of Being Indian: A New Trend in Contemporary Indian SocietyÓ (1984)
Wilma Mankiller, ÒReturning the BalanceÓ (1993)
Tribal Colleges: Indian Education for Indian People
The Carnegie Foundation, From Tribal Colleges: Shaping the Future of Native America (1989)
Playing Indian and Fighting Over Mascots
Tim Giago, Mascots, Spirituality, and Insensitivity (1991)
]S. L. Price, ÒThe Indian WarsÓ (2002)
A New Museum, A New Era?
]W. Richard West, Jr., Remarks on the Occasion of the Grand Opening Ceremony, National Museum of the American Indian (2004)
]PICTURE ESSAY History, Tradition, and Innovation in Contemporary Indian Art
]Manly Heart Woman Stealing
Back Horses.
]The Drinker.
]Pursuit of Civilization #4.
]When We Become Our Role
Models #2.
]Twinkle Twinkle Little Star Now I Know Who You Really Are.
]The End of Innocence.
]Indian Men Wear Shirts and Ties.
APPENDIX I: General Reference Works
APPENDIX II: Film Resources
] new to this edition
What is included with this book?
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.