中间通道:汉普顿学院和卡莱尔印第安工业学校的种族臣服课程

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Elizabeth C. Brown
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:本文认为,历史上的黑人汉普顿学院(1868 年)和卡莱尔印第安人工业学校(1879 年)是研究南北战争后美国的政治、领土和经济征服如何与解放计划相结合的重要场所。我没有将重点放在这些学校的手工教育上,而是转向了它们的报纸《南方工人报》和《印第安人助手报》,以展示它们是如何发展出以黑人可替代性为根基的话语表述技术,从而使种族臣服看起来像是美国内战后时期的种族解放。这些报纸既是工具,也是学生主观转变的证据。然而,这些报纸并没有提供黑人和原住民转变的真实证据,而是让人看到汉普顿和卡莱尔对种族解放的表述是如何借鉴跨大西洋奴隶制 "中间航程 "的物质和象征暴力所创造的话语技巧的。文章最后展示了扬克顿苏族作家齐特卡拉-萨(Zitkala-Ša)的三篇寄宿学校故事(1900 年)如何对印第安寄宿学校如何在后美帝国主义时代背景下将原住民的可替代性作为白人统治的一种手段进行了初步批判。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Middle Passages: Lessons in Racial Subjection at the Hampton Institute and Carlisle Indian Industrial School
Abstract:This essay argues that the historically Black Hampton Institute (1868) and the Carlisle Indian Industrial School (1879) are crucial sites to investigate how US political, territorial, and economic conquest were sutured to the project of emancipation after the Civil War. Rather than focusing on these schools’ manual education, I turn to their newspapers, the Southern Workman and Indian Helper, to demonstrate how they developed techniques of discursive representation, rooted in Black fungibility, that made racial subjection appear as racial emancipation in the postbellum period. These newspapers were framed as both tool and evidence of students’ subjective transformation. Instead of providing authentic evidence of Black and Native transformation, however, they provide a glimpse into how Hampton’s and Carlisle’s representations of racial emancipation drew on discursive techniques created in the material and symbolic violence of transatlantic slavery’s Middle Passage. The essay concludes by demonstrating how a trio of boarding school stories (1900) by the Yankton Sioux author Zitkala-Ša provides a nascent critique of the ways in which Indian boarding schools produced Native fungibility as a technique of white domination in the context of postbellum US imperialism.
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来源期刊
AMERICAN QUARTERLY
AMERICAN QUARTERLY HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: American Quarterly represents innovative interdisciplinary scholarship that engages with key issues in American Studies. The journal publishes essays that examine American societies and cultures, past and present, in global and local contexts. This includes work that contributes to our understanding of the United States in its diversity, its relations with its hemispheric neighbors, and its impact on world politics and culture. Through the publication of reviews of books, exhibitions, and diverse media, the journal seeks to make available the broad range of emergent approaches to American Studies.
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