Guardians of Tradition and Handmaidens to Change: Women's Roles in Creek Economic and Social Life During the Eighteenth Century.Published in:American Indian Quarterly, 1990, v. 14, n. 3, p. 239, doi. 10.2307/1185653By:Braund, Kathryn E. HollandPublication type:Article
Matrilineal Management: How Creek Women and Matrilineages Shaped Distinct Forms of Racialized Slavery in Creek Country at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century.Published in:Journal of Southern History, 2022, v. 88, n. 1, p. 39, doi. 10.1353/soh.2022.0001By:WRIGHT, MILLER SHORESPublication type:Article
"The Pocahontas of Georgia": Mary Musgrove in the American Literary Imagination.Published in:2015By:HAHN, STEVEN C.Publication type:Biography
Reflections on "Shee Coocys" and the Motherless Child: Creek Women in a Time of War.Published in:Alabama Review, 2011, v. 64, n. 4, p. 255, doi. 10.1353/ala.2011.0004By:Braund, Kathryn E. HollandPublication type:Article