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'Imagined bodies and imagined selves': Cultural transgression, 'unredeemed' captives and the development of American identity in colonial North America, 1520--1763

机译:“想象中的身体和想象中的自我”:文化侵略,“未赎回”的俘虏和北美殖民地美国人的身份发展,1520--1763年

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摘要

This dissertation argues that the experiences of colonial North America's 'unredeemed' captives (Euro-American captives who remained with their Native-American captors) helped English, French, and Spanish settlers to imagine their own New World identities. The knowledge that some captives chose to stay with their Native-American captor's disturbed Euro-American colonists and forced theirs to re-conceptualize how they conceived of their own New World identities.;Utilizing colonial captivity narratives and a broad variety of other sources, this thesis begins by examining how Native-Americans viewed adoption and how Euro-American settlers so often misunderstood this process. The thesis then explores how three European groups viewed themselves, Native-Americans, and those who chose to stay with the Amerindians. The Spanish emphasized reason as the hallmark of civilization, and the loss of the ability to reason as the essence of 'savagery.' The French argued control over one's self and one's desires was the defining characteristic of civility, while the descent into libertarianism led to 'savagery.' Of the three groups the English feared most that all signs of civilization could be effaced by contact with Native-American societies. These worldviews helped shape how the settlers "read" the bodies, clothes, and behavior of the captives. The captivity narratives that the Euro-Americans constructed were never simple reporting. They were shaped by these world views, by the tension between Protestant and Catholic categories of redemption, by fears about New World sexualities, as well as by Old World archetypes. The thesis concludes with a discussion of the success of English Americans after 1763 in establishing new identities that stood apart from interaction with Native-Americans.
机译:本文认为,北美殖民地“未赎回”的俘虏(与美国土著人俘虏在一起的欧美俘虏)的经历使英国,法国和西班牙定居者得以想象自己的新世界身份。一些俘虏选择与他们的美洲原住民俘虏打扰的欧裔殖民者呆在一起的知识,迫使他们重新观念化他们对自己的新世界身份的看法。;利用殖民囚禁叙述和其他各种来源,这本文首先探讨了美洲原住民如何看待收养,以及欧美定居者如何经常误解这一过程。然后,论文探讨了三个欧洲团体如何看待自己,即美洲原住民和那些选择留在美洲印第安人的人。西班牙人强调理性是文明的标志,而丧失理性的能力则是“野蛮”的本质。法国人辩称,对自己的自我和欲望的控制是文明的决定性特征,而自由主义者的下降导致了“野蛮”。在这三个群体中,英国人最担心文明的一切迹象都可以通过与美洲原住民社会的接触而消失。这些世界观有助于塑造定居者如何“读取”俘虏的尸体,衣服和行为。欧美人构造的囚禁叙述从来都不是简单的报道。这些世界观,新教和天主教救赎之间的紧张关系,对新世界性行为的恐惧以及旧世界的原型塑造了他们。本文最后讨论了1763年后英裔美国人在建立新身份方面的成功,而这些新身份不同于与美洲原住民的互动。

著录项

  • 作者

    Gilmour, R. J.;

  • 作者单位

    York University (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 York University (Canada).;
  • 学科 American history.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2004
  • 页码 425 p.
  • 总页数 425
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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