美国河流:殖民主义与命名史

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY
Alice L Baumgarter
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引用次数: 1

摘要

美国河流保留原住民名称的频率是山脉的两倍,是盆地和顶峰的四倍。如果正如历史学家所说,重新命名景观是殖民主义的产物,那么这种模式对我们理解美国历史具有重要意义。通过对四条河流的案例研究,本文探讨了为什么像Housatonic河和密西西比河这样的河流保留了原住民的名字,而像Charles河和Columbia河这样的水道却没有。水上旅行的便利性意味着白人新来者很早就探索了美国的主要河流,当时他们仍然依赖美国原住民生存。尽管欧洲人经常试图从地图上删除土著人的名字,但他们并不总是能将其从更广泛的使用中删除——当然,名字只有在作为特定地方的常用缩写时才有用。因此,重新命名景观就像征服它一样复杂和偶然。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Rivers of America: Colonialism and the History of Naming
American rivers retain Native names twice as often as mountain ranges and four times as frequently as basins and summits. If renaming the landscape was, as historians argue, the handmaiden of colonialism, then this pattern has important implications for our understanding of American history. With case studies of four rivers, this article explores why rivers like the Housatonic and the Mississippi retained Native names, while waterways like the Charles and the Columbia did not. The ease of water travel meant that White newcomers explored major American rivers at an early date, when they still depended on Indigenous Americans for their survival. Although Europeans often tried to strike Indigenous names from the map, they could not always remove them from broader usage—and names, of course, were useful only insofar as they served as a common shorthand for particular places. Renaming the landscape, therefore, was as complicated and contingent as conquering it.
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CiteScore
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