切罗基平民战士:约翰-罗斯酋长与部落主权之争》,W. Dale Weeks 著(评论)

Pub Date : 2024-04-22 DOI:10.1353/soh.2024.a925469
John P. Bowes
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The second is that the federal government’s actions toward the Cherokee and its dealings with Ross “led directly to dismantling the country’s prewar Indian policy of treaty making and its replacement with a less defined policy of impatience and violence” (p. 19). The book supports the first assertion well but is less effective in proving the second.</p> <p>From the first chapter examining removal to the fifth chapter discussing postwar negotiations, Weeks delineates the challenges Ross and the Cherokee encountered from the 1830s to the 1860s. Not all events are treated in equal depth, however; and at times the analysis moves the narrative forward while not providing details that a reader might want or need. The discussion of removal, for example, serves more as a background to illustrate the forging of Ross’s principal beliefs about unity, sovereignty, and treaty rights. As a result, discussions of Cherokee political changes, the framework of the so-called Marshall Trilogy cases at the U.S. Supreme Court, and implementation of removal are less developed. Similarly, the postremoval period from 1839 to 1860 gets a relatively brief nod on the way to the onset of the Civil War.</p> <p>The crucible of 1860–1866 receives the bulk of the author’s attention, but the book stays true in maintaining a Cherokee perspective so that the reader views the political and military conflicts in Indian Territory from that vantage point. Ross remains the axis on which this narrative rotates, however, which means that Weeks reckons with Stand Watie and the divisions within the Cherokee Nation. Watie is typically regarded as the foil to Ross. Watie was a member of the Treaty Party, escaped execution in 1839 unlike other Treaty Party leaders, and became a prominent Confederate general, while Ross struggled to keep the Cherokee Nation united. Countering what other scholars have argued, Weeks contends that Watie had little political influence yet by May 1865 had “brought more suffering to the Cherokee people than did the much-maligned Andrew Jackson” (p. 128).</p> <p>In addition to Ross and Watie, three figures played prominent roles at the war’s end and in its aftermath. Abraham Lincoln’s influence was felt in his absence, as Weeks claims Lincoln would have worked with Ross to restore the <strong>[End Page 437]</strong> Cherokee Nation instead of punishing it. Instead, Andrew Johnson dismantled prior treaties as retribution for what he judged was Cherokee treason. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 切罗基平民战士:W. Dale Weeks John P. Bowes 著 Cherokee Civil Warrior:约翰-罗斯酋长与争取部落主权的斗争》。作者:W. Dale Weeks。(诺曼:俄克拉荷马大学出版社,2023 年。第 xiv、231 页。32.95美元,ISBN 978-0-8061-9157-7)。切诺基平民战士:W. Dale Weeks 考察了切罗基首席酋长约翰-罗斯在 19 世纪中叶的领导能力,从罗斯针对佐治亚州和安德鲁-杰克逊捍卫切罗基主权开始,主要关注罗斯和切罗基部落在美国内战期间面临的挑战。本书强调切罗基人的视角和部落主权这一中心主题,这对于分析切罗基人的经历至关重要。虽然南北战争的背景很重要,但这并不是一本关于战争的书。在包括引言和结论在内的七章中,威克斯始终坚持两个观点。第一,约翰-罗斯总是做出他认为最能维护切诺基人团结和保护部落主权的决定。第二点是,联邦政府对切诺基人的行为以及与罗斯的交往 "直接导致了该国战前印第安人条约政策的瓦解,取而代之的是不那么明确的不耐烦和暴力政策"(第 19 页)。该书很好地支持了第一个论断,但在证明第二个论断方面却不那么有效。从第一章探讨迁徙到第五章讨论战后谈判,威克斯描绘了罗斯和切诺基人从 19 世纪 30 年代到 19 世纪 60 年代所遇到的挑战。然而,并非所有事件都得到了同等深度的处理;有时,分析在推动叙述向前发展的同时,却没有提供读者可能想要或需要的细节。例如,对迁移的讨论更多是作为背景,说明罗斯对统一、主权和条约权利的主要信念的形成。因此,对切诺基政治变革、美国最高法院所谓的 "马歇尔三部曲 "案件框架以及迁移的实施等方面的讨论较少。同样,从 1839 年到 1860 年的搬迁后时期,在南北战争爆发前也只得到了相对简短的介绍。作者对 1860-1866 年这一关键时期给予了大量关注,但书中仍坚持从切诺基人的视角出发,让读者从这一视角来看待印第安领地的政治和军事冲突。然而,罗斯仍然是这一叙事的轴心,这意味着《威克斯》要面对斯坦德-瓦蒂和切诺基民族内部的分裂。瓦蒂通常被视为罗斯的陪衬。瓦蒂是 "条约党 "的成员,与其他 "条约党 "领导人不同,他逃脱了1839年的死刑,并成为南方邦联的一名杰出将军,而罗斯则努力保持切罗基民族的团结。与其他学者的观点相反,Weeks 认为瓦蒂的政治影响力很小,但到 1865 年 5 月,他 "给切罗基人民带来的苦难比备受指责的安德鲁-杰克逊还要多"(第 128 页)。除罗斯和瓦蒂外,还有三位人物在战争结束和战后发挥了重要作用。亚伯拉罕-林肯(Abraham Lincoln)的影响在他缺席的情况下显现了出来,因为威克斯(Weeks)声称,林肯本可以与罗斯合作恢复切诺基部落,而不是对其进行惩罚。相反,安德鲁-约翰逊(Andrew Johnson)却废除了之前的条约,作为对他认定的切诺基叛国行为的报复。最后,美国陆军军官、外交官和未来的印第安事务专员伊利-塞缪尔-帕克并不认为罗斯是一个 "真正的印第安人",他以切诺基人为例,鼓励联邦政府在 1871 年结束条约制定政策(第 150 页)。本书强调了切诺基人的观点,尽管这种观点几乎完全是约翰-罗斯的观点,但本书的前提是坚实的。罗斯作为一个政治人物得到了很好的发展,但在断言这段历史与废除条约之间存在直接联系时,本书的叙述就不那么有说服力了。太多的...
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Cherokee Civil Warrior: Chief John Ross and the Struggle for Tribal Sovereignty by W. Dale Weeks (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Cherokee Civil Warrior: Chief John Ross and the Struggle for Tribal Sovereignty by W. Dale Weeks
  • John P. Bowes
Cherokee Civil Warrior: Chief John Ross and the Struggle for Tribal Sovereignty. By W. Dale Weeks. (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2023. Pp. xiv, 231. $32.95, ISBN 978-0-8061-9157-7.)

In Cherokee Civil Warrior: Chief John Ross and the Struggle for Tribal Sovereignty, W. Dale Weeks examines Cherokee Principal Chief John Ross’s leadership over the course of the mid-nineteenth century, beginning with Ross’s defense of Cherokee sovereignty against Georgia and Andrew Jackson but focusing primarily on the challenges that Ross and the Cherokee Nation faced during the American Civil War. The emphasis placed on the Cherokee perspective and the central theme of tribal sovereignty are both critical to this book and its effort to analyze the Cherokee experience. While the context of the Civil War matters, this is not a book about the war.

Over the course of seven chapters, including the introduction and conclusion, Weeks asserts two points consistently. The first is that John Ross always made decisions that he believed provided the best opportunity to maintain Cherokee unity and protect tribal sovereignty. The second is that the federal government’s actions toward the Cherokee and its dealings with Ross “led directly to dismantling the country’s prewar Indian policy of treaty making and its replacement with a less defined policy of impatience and violence” (p. 19). The book supports the first assertion well but is less effective in proving the second.

From the first chapter examining removal to the fifth chapter discussing postwar negotiations, Weeks delineates the challenges Ross and the Cherokee encountered from the 1830s to the 1860s. Not all events are treated in equal depth, however; and at times the analysis moves the narrative forward while not providing details that a reader might want or need. The discussion of removal, for example, serves more as a background to illustrate the forging of Ross’s principal beliefs about unity, sovereignty, and treaty rights. As a result, discussions of Cherokee political changes, the framework of the so-called Marshall Trilogy cases at the U.S. Supreme Court, and implementation of removal are less developed. Similarly, the postremoval period from 1839 to 1860 gets a relatively brief nod on the way to the onset of the Civil War.

The crucible of 1860–1866 receives the bulk of the author’s attention, but the book stays true in maintaining a Cherokee perspective so that the reader views the political and military conflicts in Indian Territory from that vantage point. Ross remains the axis on which this narrative rotates, however, which means that Weeks reckons with Stand Watie and the divisions within the Cherokee Nation. Watie is typically regarded as the foil to Ross. Watie was a member of the Treaty Party, escaped execution in 1839 unlike other Treaty Party leaders, and became a prominent Confederate general, while Ross struggled to keep the Cherokee Nation united. Countering what other scholars have argued, Weeks contends that Watie had little political influence yet by May 1865 had “brought more suffering to the Cherokee people than did the much-maligned Andrew Jackson” (p. 128).

In addition to Ross and Watie, three figures played prominent roles at the war’s end and in its aftermath. Abraham Lincoln’s influence was felt in his absence, as Weeks claims Lincoln would have worked with Ross to restore the [End Page 437] Cherokee Nation instead of punishing it. Instead, Andrew Johnson dismantled prior treaties as retribution for what he judged was Cherokee treason. Lastly, U.S. Army officer, diplomat, and future commissioner of Indian Affairs Ely Samuel Parker did not see Ross as a “true Indian” and used the Cherokee example to encourage the end of the federal government’s treaty-making policy by 1871 (p. 150).

This book has a solid premise aided by its emphasis of the Cherokee perspective, though that perspective is almost exclusively that of John Ross. Ross is developed well as a political figure, but the narrative is less persuasive when asserting a direct connection between this history and the dismantling of treaty-making. Too many...

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