希拉·麦克马纳斯的《现在两面:书写美国西部的边缘》

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
David C. Beyreis
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Another element of the author's call to action is to search for patterns and dissimilarities in the processes of borderlands formation—what is true for the southern border is not necessarily true for the northern border and vice versa. In laying out a clear set of themes for investigation, pointing out analytical shortcomings, and providing commentary on underdeveloped topics, the author has produced an extraordinarily useful primer for students of borderlands history. To bring clarity to this complex topic, McManus identifies five themes that unite borderlands literature. First, she addresses borderlands as Indigenous spaces, particularly as sites of Native political dominance, trade, and diplomacy. McManus stresses the role of women as laborers and kinfolk and calls for increased attention to their roles as diplomats and peacemakers. Second, borderlands are places where nation-states attempt to create static identities for their citizens. Although governments often view borders as places where national identities are clear and unchanging, the reality is far more complex. The author points out that borderlanders themselves often make choices about loyalty and identity at a grassroots level, in decisions that challenge national, exclusivist binaries. Third, borderlands are often violent places where national law enforcement agencies and military forces attempt to \"secure\" the region by restricting and regulating the movement of people and goods. Fourth, the author contends that borderlands are capitalist landscapes whose function is often at odds with the nation-states' attempts to make borders hard dividing lines. [End Page 584] Mining, ranching, manufacturing, and farming have traditionally relied on the easy cross-border movement of capital and labor. In this sense, capitalism works at cross purposes with the forces seeking to stabilize borderland regions. Finally, borderlands are places where people engage in grassroots processes of identify formation, like blending, choosing, and becoming, that often challenge state directives and aspirations. McManus also points out notable gaps and disparities in borderlands literature. The author laments a historiographical imbalance between the massive list of works on the U.S.–Mexico borderlands and the much smaller body of literature on the U.S.–Canada borderlands. The robust literature of the Texas–Mexico borderlands contributes to this disparity. That said, works on Texas by historians like Juliana Barr, George T. Díaz, Monica Perales, Raúl A. Ramos, and Andrés Reséndez provide model studies of the region. Another gap McManus identifies is a relative paucity of gender history. Women are often overlooked and under analyzed. Curiously, the author largely overlooks environmental history as another avenue of comparative analysis. Sheila McManus has done a marvelous job pulling together, analyzing, and comparing a vast range of secondary borderlands material. Her clarity in identifying historiographical themes brings order from chaos. Her call to action, for more work on gender and the U.S.–Canada borderlands, could stimulate work in these fields and bring more regional parity. Both Sides Now should be required reading in graduate seminars and will undoubtedly become a standard reference work in North American borderlands studies. This book is a superb introduction to an endlessly fascinating, complex, and important topic. David C. 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To bring clarity to this complex topic, McManus identifies five themes that unite borderlands literature. First, she addresses borderlands as Indigenous spaces, particularly as sites of Native political dominance, trade, and diplomacy. McManus stresses the role of women as laborers and kinfolk and calls for increased attention to their roles as diplomats and peacemakers. Second, borderlands are places where nation-states attempt to create static identities for their citizens. Although governments often view borders as places where national identities are clear and unchanging, the reality is far more complex. The author points out that borderlanders themselves often make choices about loyalty and identity at a grassroots level, in decisions that challenge national, exclusivist binaries. 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The author laments a historiographical imbalance between the massive list of works on the U.S.–Mexico borderlands and the much smaller body of literature on the U.S.–Canada borderlands. The robust literature of the Texas–Mexico borderlands contributes to this disparity. That said, works on Texas by historians like Juliana Barr, George T. Díaz, Monica Perales, Raúl A. Ramos, and Andrés Reséndez provide model studies of the region. Another gap McManus identifies is a relative paucity of gender history. Women are often overlooked and under analyzed. Curiously, the author largely overlooks environmental history as another avenue of comparative analysis. Sheila McManus has done a marvelous job pulling together, analyzing, and comparing a vast range of secondary borderlands material. Her clarity in identifying historiographical themes brings order from chaos. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

书评:《双面现在:书写美国西部的边缘》作者:希拉·麦克马纳斯大卫·c·贝里斯《双面现在:书写美国西部的边缘》希拉·麦克马纳斯著。大学城:德州农工大学出版社,2022。204页。插图、注释、参考书目、索引。)《无主之地》很复杂。这些地区往往是政治争论、经济一体化和基层身份形成的场所,而不是一个国家监管商业和决定国家忠诚的力量正在上升的地方。希拉·麦克马纳斯呼吁历史学家为边疆研究开发一个更细致的比较框架。这项任务的一部分涉及纠正历史编纂中优先考虑美墨边境的不平衡。作者呼吁采取行动的另一个因素是寻找边境地区形成过程中的模式和差异——适用于南部边境的不一定适用于北部边境,反之亦然。作者为研究设定了一套清晰的主题,指出了分析上的不足,并对不发达的主题进行了评论,为研究边疆历史的学生提供了一本非常有用的入门书。为了使这个复杂的话题变得清晰,麦克马纳斯确定了将边境文学联系在一起的五个主题。首先,她将边境地区视为土著空间,特别是作为土著政治统治、贸易和外交的场所。麦克马纳斯强调了妇女作为劳动者和亲属的作用,并呼吁更多地关注她们作为外交官和和平缔造者的作用。其次,边疆是民族国家试图为其公民创造静态身份的地方。尽管各国政府经常将边界视为国家身份清晰而不变的地方,但实际情况要复杂得多。作者指出,边境居民自己经常在基层做出关于忠诚和身份的选择,这些决定挑战了民族的、排他性的二元对立。第三,边境地区往往是暴力频发的地方,国家执法机构和军事力量试图通过限制和管制人员和货物的流动来“确保”该地区的安全。第四,作者认为,边境地带是资本主义的景观,其功能往往与民族国家试图将边界划定为硬性分界线的做法相冲突。采矿、牧场、制造业和农业传统上依赖于资本和劳动力的跨境流动。从这个意义上说,资本主义与寻求稳定边境地区的力量是背道而驰的。最后,边界地带是人们参与认同形成的基层过程的地方,比如融合、选择和成为,这经常挑战国家的指令和愿望。麦克马纳斯还指出了边境文学中显著的差距和差异。作者哀叹美国-墨西哥边境的大量作品和美国-加拿大边境的小得多的文学作品之间的历史不平衡。德克萨斯和墨西哥边境地区的强大文学促成了这种差异。也就是说,历史学家如朱莉安娜·巴尔、乔治·t·Díaz、莫妮卡·佩拉莱斯、Raúl A.拉莫斯和安德里萨斯·雷萨姆德兹对德克萨斯州的研究提供了该地区的模型研究。麦克马纳斯指出的另一个差距是性别历史的相对缺乏。女性经常被忽视和分析不足。奇怪的是,作者在很大程度上忽略了环境史作为比较分析的另一个途径。希拉·麦克马纳斯(Sheila McManus)做了一项了不起的工作,将大量次要边缘地区的材料汇集在一起,进行分析和比较。她在确定历史主题方面的清晰使混乱中有了秩序。她呼吁采取行动,在性别和美加边境地区开展更多工作,这可能会刺激这些领域的工作,并带来更多的地区平等。《现在的双方》应该是研究生研讨会的必读书目,毫无疑问,它将成为北美边境研究的标准参考著作。这本书是一个极好的介绍一个无穷迷人的,复杂的,重要的话题。David C. Beyreis圣玛丽学校(北卡罗来纳州罗利)版权所有©2022德克萨斯州历史协会
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Both Sides Now: Writing the Edges of the American West by Sheila McManus
Reviewed by: Both Sides Now: Writing the Edges of the American West by Sheila McManus David C. Beyreis Both Sides Now: Writing the Edges of the American West. By Sheila McManus. (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2022. Pp. 204. Illustrations, notes, bibliography, index.) Borderlands are complicated. Rather than places where a country's power to regulate commerce and dictate national loyalties are ascendant, these territories are often sites of political contestation, economic integration, and grass-roots identity formation. Sheila McManus calls on historians to develop a more nuanced comparative framework for borderlands studies. Part of this task involves rectifying an imbalance in historiography prioritizing the U.S.–Mexico borderlands. Another element of the author's call to action is to search for patterns and dissimilarities in the processes of borderlands formation—what is true for the southern border is not necessarily true for the northern border and vice versa. In laying out a clear set of themes for investigation, pointing out analytical shortcomings, and providing commentary on underdeveloped topics, the author has produced an extraordinarily useful primer for students of borderlands history. To bring clarity to this complex topic, McManus identifies five themes that unite borderlands literature. First, she addresses borderlands as Indigenous spaces, particularly as sites of Native political dominance, trade, and diplomacy. McManus stresses the role of women as laborers and kinfolk and calls for increased attention to their roles as diplomats and peacemakers. Second, borderlands are places where nation-states attempt to create static identities for their citizens. Although governments often view borders as places where national identities are clear and unchanging, the reality is far more complex. The author points out that borderlanders themselves often make choices about loyalty and identity at a grassroots level, in decisions that challenge national, exclusivist binaries. Third, borderlands are often violent places where national law enforcement agencies and military forces attempt to "secure" the region by restricting and regulating the movement of people and goods. Fourth, the author contends that borderlands are capitalist landscapes whose function is often at odds with the nation-states' attempts to make borders hard dividing lines. [End Page 584] Mining, ranching, manufacturing, and farming have traditionally relied on the easy cross-border movement of capital and labor. In this sense, capitalism works at cross purposes with the forces seeking to stabilize borderland regions. Finally, borderlands are places where people engage in grassroots processes of identify formation, like blending, choosing, and becoming, that often challenge state directives and aspirations. McManus also points out notable gaps and disparities in borderlands literature. The author laments a historiographical imbalance between the massive list of works on the U.S.–Mexico borderlands and the much smaller body of literature on the U.S.–Canada borderlands. The robust literature of the Texas–Mexico borderlands contributes to this disparity. That said, works on Texas by historians like Juliana Barr, George T. Díaz, Monica Perales, Raúl A. Ramos, and Andrés Reséndez provide model studies of the region. Another gap McManus identifies is a relative paucity of gender history. Women are often overlooked and under analyzed. Curiously, the author largely overlooks environmental history as another avenue of comparative analysis. Sheila McManus has done a marvelous job pulling together, analyzing, and comparing a vast range of secondary borderlands material. Her clarity in identifying historiographical themes brings order from chaos. Her call to action, for more work on gender and the U.S.–Canada borderlands, could stimulate work in these fields and bring more regional parity. Both Sides Now should be required reading in graduate seminars and will undoubtedly become a standard reference work in North American borderlands studies. This book is a superb introduction to an endlessly fascinating, complex, and important topic. David C. Beyreis Saint Mary's School (Raleigh, North Carolina) Copyright © 2022 The Texas State Historical Association
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
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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