That's Not a Wolf: English Misconceptions and the Fate of New England's Indigenous Dogs

IF 1.1 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Strother E. Roberts
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Abstract

Abstract:Early modern English explorers and settlers in New England and elsewhere routinely mistook indigenous American dogs for wolves. This repeated misidentification arose in part from aspects of indigenous dog morphology, but it also served to denigrate Native American cultures by denying their possession of domesticated animals. Modern environmental historians have unconsciously reproduced these prejudices against indigenous dogs without critically assessing their accuracy or their function as part of the rhetoric of colonialism. Indigenous dogs have been presented as incompletely domesticated, "semiwild" creatures when in reality they were just as domesticated as their European cousins. Indigenous dogs were the most numerous nonhuman large predators in early New England, but their misidentification as wolves has caused them to be largely overlooked in the historical record. Their population plummeted over the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as the Native communities to which they belonged suffered from introduced disease and English aggression. English efforts both to protect livestock through a war on wolves and to control loose dogs increased pressure on dogs of indigenous heritage. In the end, the English cultural prejudice against wolfish-looking dogs that erased indigenous dogs from the historical record largely erased living indigenous dogs from the New England landscape.
那不是狼:英国人的误解和新英格兰土着狗的命运
摘要:在新英格兰和其他地方的早期现代英国探险家和定居者经常把美洲土著狗误认为狼。这种反复的误认在一定程度上源于土著狗的形态,但它也通过否认美洲原住民拥有驯养动物来诋毁他们的文化。现代环境历史学家无意识地再现了这些对土著狗的偏见,而没有批判性地评估它们的准确性或作为殖民主义言论的一部分的功能。土著狗被认为是不完全驯化的“半野生”生物,而事实上,它们和欧洲表亲一样被驯化。在新英格兰早期,土著狗是数量最多的非人类大型食肉动物,但它们被误认为狼,导致它们在历史记录中基本上被忽视了。在17世纪和18世纪,由于他们所属的土著社区遭受了外来疾病和英国人的侵略,他们的人口急剧下降。英国通过对狼的战争来保护牲畜和控制流浪狗的努力增加了对土著犬的压力。最终,英国人对长得像狼的狗的文化偏见将土著狗从历史记录中抹去,这在很大程度上将活着的土著狗从新英格兰景观中抹去。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
52
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