Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansion by Elliott West (review)

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Matthew Babcock
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Historians commonly refer to the period from 1865 to 1900 as the “Age of Transformation” because of the dizzying social, economic, and political developments occurring across the United States in that era. West contends that the nation’s transformation began much earlier and was intensified by the discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill and the acquisition of California and the Southwest in 1848, when the West was born “as a region” (p. xix). Rejecting an east coast-driven, Civil War-centric conception of American history, West employs his Greater Reconstruction thesis, convincingly arguing “The Civil War and the birth of the West” were linked and equally important for understanding the cascading changes in “national life” from the mid-1840s to 1880 (p. xx). Offering insights into everything from hydraulic mining to locusts, West’s book is significant for its extraordinarily rich synthesis of California and Great Plains history during this age of expansion.</p> <p>West’s well-researched twenty-three-chapter study is divided into three chronological sections. Part I, “Unsettling America,” describes the “continental unsettling” that the nation experienced from 1845 to 1865, fueled by westward territorial and economic expansion, violence against ethnic minorities and native peoples, and the Civil War (p. 2). During that conflict, the federal government asserted firmer control over the West, the author posits, by turning back the Confederate invasion of New Mexico and subduing and confining Native Americans. The next two sections primarily address the postbellum era to the 1880s. Part 2, “Things Come Together,” shows how the United States government constructed an infrastructure of roads, railroads, and telegraph wires across the West, binding it to the nation and facilitating its exploration and scientific study. Einally, Part 3, “Worked into Being,” focuses on the exploitation of western resources and the region’s environmental and scientific transformations through ranching, agriculture, and mining.</p> <p>Any historian looking to update and enliven their lectures on the nineteenth-century American West, particularly on California and the Great Plains, will find a mother lode of material here. Readers learn that San Erancisco’s mint <strong>[End Page 463]</strong>processed so much gold in 1856 that its smokestack gilded surrounding rooftops, and that by 1880 the value of the Golden State’s wheat and wheat flour exports exceeded that of gold and silver from its mines. Given West’s previous award-winning works, it should come as no surprise that he excels at discussing the rise of the horse cultures on the contested plains, their ecological impact, and the Army’s subsequent efforts to defeat them in the so-called ”War against Indian America” (p. 57). Demonstrating his broad command of recent historiography and penchant for quantitative research, West extends that war to California, calling the ninety-percent decline in the native population genocidal, and arguing that thee forty-niners’ post-1848 racist violence against Hispanos was even more intense than that against African Americans in the Southeast after 1880.</p> <p>Some readers may take issue with West’s assumptions. Although it is a historical fact that the United States first became a transcontinental nation in 1848, development in the far west has much deeper roots. New Mexico and California Hispanos mined for precious metals long before that. Hispanic influence on cattle ranching went beyond the ”longhorn” to include terminology from rodeo to lasso, and Indian reservations had earlier origins in the United States and Europe. Given that 5,000 troops pursued Geronimo and Chiricahua holdouts in the Sierra Madre prior to 1886 in conjunction with Mexican forces, West’s assertion that this was an “extensive police action” and not a war also seems questionable (p. 420). Nevertheless, this work is an effective analysis of a compelling subject, adding to the author’s record of producing such...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":42779,"journal":{"name":"SOUTHWESTERN HISTORICAL QUARTERLY","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"SOUTHWESTERN HISTORICAL QUARTERLY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/swh.2024.a928847","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansionby Elliott West
  • Matthew Babcock
Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansion. By Elliott West. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2023. Pp. 628. Illustrations, maps, notes, bibliography, index).

In Continental Reckoning, historian Elliott West presents a compelling, expansive, and exceptionally well-written history of the American West, placing it in both national and global contexts, from the 1840s to the 1880s. Historians commonly refer to the period from 1865 to 1900 as the “Age of Transformation” because of the dizzying social, economic, and political developments occurring across the United States in that era. West contends that the nation’s transformation began much earlier and was intensified by the discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill and the acquisition of California and the Southwest in 1848, when the West was born “as a region” (p. xix). Rejecting an east coast-driven, Civil War-centric conception of American history, West employs his Greater Reconstruction thesis, convincingly arguing “The Civil War and the birth of the West” were linked and equally important for understanding the cascading changes in “national life” from the mid-1840s to 1880 (p. xx). Offering insights into everything from hydraulic mining to locusts, West’s book is significant for its extraordinarily rich synthesis of California and Great Plains history during this age of expansion.

West’s well-researched twenty-three-chapter study is divided into three chronological sections. Part I, “Unsettling America,” describes the “continental unsettling” that the nation experienced from 1845 to 1865, fueled by westward territorial and economic expansion, violence against ethnic minorities and native peoples, and the Civil War (p. 2). During that conflict, the federal government asserted firmer control over the West, the author posits, by turning back the Confederate invasion of New Mexico and subduing and confining Native Americans. The next two sections primarily address the postbellum era to the 1880s. Part 2, “Things Come Together,” shows how the United States government constructed an infrastructure of roads, railroads, and telegraph wires across the West, binding it to the nation and facilitating its exploration and scientific study. Einally, Part 3, “Worked into Being,” focuses on the exploitation of western resources and the region’s environmental and scientific transformations through ranching, agriculture, and mining.

Any historian looking to update and enliven their lectures on the nineteenth-century American West, particularly on California and the Great Plains, will find a mother lode of material here. Readers learn that San Erancisco’s mint [End Page 463]processed so much gold in 1856 that its smokestack gilded surrounding rooftops, and that by 1880 the value of the Golden State’s wheat and wheat flour exports exceeded that of gold and silver from its mines. Given West’s previous award-winning works, it should come as no surprise that he excels at discussing the rise of the horse cultures on the contested plains, their ecological impact, and the Army’s subsequent efforts to defeat them in the so-called ”War against Indian America” (p. 57). Demonstrating his broad command of recent historiography and penchant for quantitative research, West extends that war to California, calling the ninety-percent decline in the native population genocidal, and arguing that thee forty-niners’ post-1848 racist violence against Hispanos was even more intense than that against African Americans in the Southeast after 1880.

Some readers may take issue with West’s assumptions. Although it is a historical fact that the United States first became a transcontinental nation in 1848, development in the far west has much deeper roots. New Mexico and California Hispanos mined for precious metals long before that. Hispanic influence on cattle ranching went beyond the ”longhorn” to include terminology from rodeo to lasso, and Indian reservations had earlier origins in the United States and Europe. Given that 5,000 troops pursued Geronimo and Chiricahua holdouts in the Sierra Madre prior to 1886 in conjunction with Mexican forces, West’s assertion that this was an “extensive police action” and not a war also seems questionable (p. 420). Nevertheless, this work is an effective analysis of a compelling subject, adding to the author’s record of producing such...

大陆的抉择:扩张时代的美国西部》,埃利奥特-韦斯特著(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者:: Continental Reckoning:扩张时代的美国西部》(The American West in the Age of Expansionby Elliott West Matthew Babcock Continental Reckoning:扩张时代的美国西部》。作者:埃利奥特-韦斯特。(林肯:内布拉斯加大学出版社,2023 年。Pp.628.插图、地图、注释、参考书目、索引)。在《大陆重算》一书中,历史学家埃利奥特-韦斯特(Elliott West)将美国西部置于 19 世纪 40 年代至 19 世纪 80 年代的国家和全球背景下,介绍了一部引人入胜、视野开阔、文笔优美的美国西部史。历史学家通常将 1865 年至 1900 年这一时期称为 "变革时代",因为在这一时期,美国各地的社会、经济和政治发展令人眼花缭乱。韦斯特认为,美国的转型开始得更早,1848 年在萨特磨坊发现黄金并获得加利福尼亚州和西南部后,西部 "作为一个地区 "应运而生(第 xix 页)。韦斯特摒弃了以内战为中心、以东海岸为驱动力的美国历史观,提出了 "大重建 "论,令人信服地论证了 "内战和西部的诞生 "是相互关联的,对于理解 19 世纪 40 年代中期至 1880 年 "国家生活 "的层层变化同样重要(第 xx 页)。韦斯特在书中对从水力开采到蝗虫等一切问题都进行了深入探讨,其重要意义在于对加利福尼亚和大平原在这一扩张时代的历史进行了异常丰富的综合。韦斯特的研究报告经过精心研究,共 23 章,按时间顺序分为三个部分。第一部分 "动荡的美国 "描述了 1845 年至 1865 年间美国经历的 "大陆动荡",这是由向西的领土和经济扩张、针对少数民族和原住民的暴力以及南北战争所引发的(第 2 页)。作者认为,在这场冲突中,联邦政府通过击退南方邦联对新墨西哥州的入侵以及征服和限制美国原住民,对西部地区实施了更强有力的控制。接下来的两部分主要论述了战后至 19 世纪 80 年代的情况。第 2 部分 "万事俱备 "展示了美国政府如何在西部修建公路、铁路和电报线等基础设施,将西部与国家联系在一起,促进西部的探索和科学研究。最后,第 3 部分 "劳动创造 "重点介绍了西部资源的开发,以及该地区通过牧场、农业和采矿业进行的环境和科学变革。任何历史学家如果想更新和活跃他们关于十九世纪美国西部,特别是加利福尼亚和大平原的讲座,都会在这里找到大量资料。读者可以了解到,1856 年圣埃朗西斯科的铸币 [完 第 463 页]厂加工了大量黄金,其烟囱为周围的屋顶镀上了金色,到 1880 年,金州的小麦和小麦粉出口价值超过了其矿山的黄金和白银出口价值。鉴于韦斯特之前的获奖作品,他擅长讨论马文化在有争议的平原上的兴起、它们对生态的影响以及军队随后在所谓的 "美洲印第安人战争"(第 57 页)中为击败它们所做的努力,这一点不足为奇。韦斯特展示了他对最新史学的广泛掌握和对定量研究的偏好,他将这场战争延伸到加利福尼亚,称当地人口减少百分之九十为种族灭绝,并认为 1848 年后四零九人对西班牙裔的种族主义暴力甚至比 1880 年后东南部对非洲裔美国人的种族主义暴力更为激烈。一些读者可能会对韦斯特的假设提出异议。虽然美国在 1848 年首次成为一个横跨大陆的国家是历史事实,但西部的发展有着更深远的渊源。早在此之前,新墨西哥州和加利福尼亚州的西班牙裔人就开始开采贵金属。西班牙裔对牧牛业的影响远不止 "长角牛",还包括从牛仔竞技到套索等术语,而印第安人保留地在美国和欧洲的起源也更早。鉴于在 1886 年之前,有 5000 名士兵与墨西哥军队一起追击马德雷山脉的杰罗尼莫和奇里卡瓦人,West 声称这是一次 "广泛的警察行动",而不是一场战争,这似乎也值得商榷(第 420 页)。尽管如此,这部作品还是对一个引人入胜的主题进行了有效的分析,为作者创作此类作品的历史记录增添了浓墨重彩的一笔。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
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106
期刊介绍: The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, continuously published since 1897, is the premier source of scholarly information about the history of Texas and the Southwest. The first 100 volumes of the Quarterly, more than 57,000 pages, are now available Online with searchable Tables of Contents.
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