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引用次数: 0
摘要
1856年,美国外事使团委员会(American Board of commissionofforeign Missions)用从儿童那里筹集的资金购买了一艘船,以支持前往密克罗尼西亚的使团。从儿童文学,报纸文章,小册子和传教士的信件中,本文跟随“儿童传教船”,或晨星,从波士顿到太平洋的Ebon环礁。书中认为,传教士们并没有把太平洋看作一个边界或广阔的空间,而是把它看作一个“岛屿的海洋”,与遍布夏威夷群岛和北美大陆的“传教士定居群岛”相连。文章进一步认为,这艘船和密克罗尼西亚使团的故事帮助形成了一个多代的资本主义和新教公众,使后来的美国传教士和美国帝国主义在太平洋扩张成为可能。本文是《太平洋历史评论》特刊“19世纪美国西部的宗教”的一部分。
With money raised from children, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions purchased a ship in 1856 to support a mission to Micronesia. Drawing from children’s literature, newspaper articles, pamphlets, and missionaries’ letters, this article follows the “Children’s Mission Ship,” or Morning Star, from Boston to Ebon Atoll in the Pacific. It argues that missionaries viewed the Pacific not as a border or vast empty space, but rather as a “sea of islands” and as contiguous with “missionary settler archipelagos” throughout the Hawaiian Islands and North American continent. The article further argues that stories from the ship and the Micronesian mission helped forge a multi-generational capitalist and Protestant public that enacted and enabled subsequent American missionary and United States imperial expansion in the Pacific. This article is part of a special issue of Pacific Historical Review, “Religion in the Nineteenth-Century American West.”
期刊介绍:
For over 70 years, the Pacific Historical Review has accurately and adeptly covered the history of American expansion to the Pacific and beyond, as well as the post-frontier developments of the 20th-century American West. Recent articles have discussed: •Japanese American Internment •The Establishment of Zion and Bryce National Parks in Utah •Mexican Americans, Testing, and School Policy 1920-1940 •Irish Immigrant Settlements in Nineteenth-Century California and Australia •American Imperialism in Oceania •Native American Labor in the Early Twentieth Century •U.S.-Philippines Relations •Pacific Railroad and Westward Expansion before 1945