"Nothing which hunger will not devour": Disgust and Sustenance in the Northeastern Borderlands

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY
Carla Cevasco
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract:In the borderlands of northeastern North America in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, hunger forced colonists and Native Americans to eat substances they found disgusting. This article reads captivity narratives and missionary accounts to argue that disgust fundamentally tested, transgressed, and reified cultural boundaries in the borderlands, while shaping the archive of early American foodways. In doing so, this article historicizes the concept of disgust and its formation in early America, and examines how colonial disgust formed perceptions of Indigenous food supplies. English and French settlers recorded their disgust with Indian food and claimed that Indigenous people could not even conceptualize disgust. The rhetorical aims of this literature of disgust shaped the colonial written archive, which records far fewer incidences of Native disgust. Nevertheless, these same sources document Native experiences of revulsion at colonial foodways and the foodways of other Native nations, which complicate the colonial narrative of the absence of Indian revulsion. A case study of fermentation and decay in Native and colonial foodways demonstrates that colonists saw Native fermented foods as rotten and thereby understated Native Americans' food supplies, contributing to an imperial discourse on Indigenous "poverty," food systems, and land use that sought to justify colonialism.
“饥不择食”:东北边陲的厌恶与生存
摘要:在17世纪和18世纪的北美东北部边境地区,饥饿迫使殖民者和印第安人吃他们觉得恶心的东西。这篇文章读了囚禁叙事和传教士的叙述,认为厌恶从根本上考验、超越和具体化了边境地区的文化界限,同时塑造了早期美国饮食方式的档案。在此过程中,本文将厌恶的概念及其在早期美国的形成历史化,并研究殖民厌恶如何形成对土著食物供应的看法。英国和法国移民记录了他们对印度食物的厌恶,并声称土著居民甚至无法将厌恶概念化。这种厌恶文学的修辞目的塑造了殖民时期的书面档案,这些档案记录的土著厌恶事件要少得多。然而,这些同样的资料记录了印第安人对殖民地食物方式和其他土著民族食物方式的厌恶经历,这使得印第安人没有厌恶的殖民叙事变得复杂。一个关于土著和殖民地食物方式中发酵和腐烂的案例研究表明,殖民者认为土著发酵食品是腐烂的,因此低估了印第安人的食物供应,从而促成了关于土著“贫困”、食物系统和土地使用的帝国话语,试图为殖民主义辩护。
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
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
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