“A Simple Act of Justice”: The Pueblo Rejection of U.S. Citizenship in the Early Twentieth Century

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Lila M. Teeters
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract In January of 1920, the House of Representatives passed HR 288, also known as the Carter Bill, which would have made all American Indians born in the territorial United States citizens. While lauded by some as a “simple act of justice” to extend citizenship to America’s first peoples, many Native Americans protested the bill, which eventually led to its demise. In the press, the Pueblos led the protest. Their activism highlights key, yet overlooked, developments in American Indian citizenship in the early twentieth century. First, citizenship lost any pretense of a consensual nature. Second, Indigenous protests forced congressmen to change the very nature of citizenship: from a status that marked completed assimilation to something much more pluralistic. Highlighting the Pueblos’ fight helps historians analyze Native activism in the Progressive Era while problematizing citizenship as the ultimate aspirational status.
“一个简单的正义行为”:20世纪初普韦布洛人对美国公民身份的拒绝
1920年1月,众议院通过了HR 288,也被称为卡特法案,该法案将使所有在美国领土上出生的美国印第安人成为美国公民。虽然一些人称赞这是一个“简单的正义之举”,将公民身份扩大到美国的第一批人,但许多印第安人抗议该法案,最终导致该法案的消亡。在媒体上,普韦布洛人领导了抗议活动。他们的行动强调了20世纪初美国印第安人公民身份的关键发展,但却被忽视了。首先,公民身份失去了任何自愿性质的伪装。其次,原住民的抗议迫使国会议员改变公民身份的本质:从标志着完全同化的身份转变为更加多元的身份。强调普韦布洛人的斗争有助于历史学家分析进步时代的土著激进主义,同时将公民身份作为最终的理想地位提出问题。
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CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
51
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