Indigenous Religious Traditions and the Limits of White Supremacy

IF 0.4 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Tiffany Hale
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Although stereotypes and misunderstandings of Native American worldviews abound, historians can look to the pan-Indian movement known as the Ghost Dance for a clear example of the role religious devotion played in many of these communities post-1870. I introduce the concept of fugitive religion here as a new lens for understanding how displaced Indigenous groups in what is today the United States fought for their existence in an era characterized by acute racial violence. I argue that fugitive religion created zones of protection for self and community that allowed Native nations to persist beyond the racial terror that defined the American West in the last half of the nineteenth century. This article is part of a special issue of Pacific Historical Review, “Religion in the Nineteenth-Century American West.”
土著宗教传统和白人至上主义的局限性
尽管对印第安人世界观的刻板印象和误解比比皆是,但历史学家可以从被称为“鬼舞”(Ghost Dance)的泛印第安运动中找到一个清晰的例子,说明1870年后宗教信仰在许多印第安社区中所扮演的角色。我在这里介绍了逃亡宗教的概念,作为一个新的视角来理解今天美国流离失所的土著群体是如何在一个以严重种族暴力为特征的时代为自己的生存而斗争的。我认为,逃亡的宗教为自我和社区创造了保护区域,使土著民族能够在19世纪后半叶界定美国西部的种族恐怖之后继续存在。本文是《太平洋历史评论》特刊“19世纪美国西部的宗教”的一部分。
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
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: For over 70 years, the Pacific Historical Review has accurately and adeptly covered the history of American expansion to the Pacific and beyond, as well as the post-frontier developments of the 20th-century American West. Recent articles have discussed: •Japanese American Internment •The Establishment of Zion and Bryce National Parks in Utah •Mexican Americans, Testing, and School Policy 1920-1940 •Irish Immigrant Settlements in Nineteenth-Century California and Australia •American Imperialism in Oceania •Native American Labor in the Early Twentieth Century •U.S.-Philippines Relations •Pacific Railroad and Westward Expansion before 1945
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