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Vanishing Species, Dying Races: A History of Extinction in America.

机译:消失的物种,濒临灭绝的种族:美国的灭绝史。

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摘要

Until the dawn of the nineteenth century, leading scientists in North America and Europe still debated whether extinction could occur in a world of God's flawless design. Today, not only is extinction irrefutable, it has become a rallying point for environmentalists and other political activists in America and around the globe. Americans have thus spent two centuries struggling to come to terms with extinction and its implications for how humans should interact with the environment and each other. For most of this history, Americans have considered racial extinction a possibility every bit as real and worrisome as the eradication of species. And in many instances, individuals have drawn connections between wilderness declension and racial decline. However, Americans have expected different races to follow the nation's wildlife into oblivion at different times, and attitudes towards species extinction have shifted accordingly.;In my dissertation, I explore what I perceive as a key transition in American environmental and racial thought. Prior to the late nineteenth century, white Americans generally viewed Indians as the race most likely to vanish from the continent. Whites associated Indians with wilderness, and believed that both must make way for the inevitable march of civilization. During this period, white Americans often either denied that species extinction was occurring, or accepted it as an inevitable corollary of progress. As the turn of the century approached, however, whites came to see themselves as an imperiled race, and increasingly identified with the nation's dwindling wildlife. Fearing that they would share the Indians' anticipated demise, white elites developed the preservationist arguments that laid the groundwork for the modern environmental movement. By identifying the social, cultural, economic, demographic, and environmental factors that propelled this transition, I have attempted both to expose the racial anxieties underlying modern environmentalism, and to carve out a place for the environment in the history of American race relations.
机译:直到19世纪初,北美和欧洲的主要科学家仍在争论在上帝无瑕疵的设计世界中是否会发生灭绝。如今,灭绝不仅是无可辩驳的,而且已成为美国及全球环保主义者和其他政治活动家的集结点。因此,美国人花了两个世纪的时间才努力解决灭绝及其对人类如何与环境以及彼此相互作用的影响。在这段历史的大部分时间里,美国人都认为种族灭绝与消除物种一样真实而令人担忧。在许多情况下,人们在荒野的衰落与种族的衰落之间建立了联系。然而,美国人期望在不同的时期有不同的种族追随国家的野生动物,而对物种灭绝的态度也相应地发生了转变。在我的论文中,我探索了我认为是美国环境和种族思想的一个重要转变。在19世纪末之前,美国白人普遍将印第安人视为种族最有可能从该大陆消失的种族。白人将印第安人与荒野联系在一起,并认为两者都必须为不可避免的文明前进让路。在此期间,美国白人经常要么否认物种灭绝正在发生,要么将其视为必然的进步推论。然而,随着世纪之交的到来,白人开始将自己视为濒临灭绝的种族,并越来越被该国日益减少的野生动植物所认同。白人白人精英们担心他们会分享印第安人的预期灭亡,因此提出了保存主义观点,为现代环境运动奠定了基础。通过确定推动这一转变的社会,文化,经济,人口和环境因素,我试图揭示现代环境主义背后的种族焦虑,并试图在美国种族关系的历史上为环境开辟一席之地。

著录项

  • 作者

    Powell, Miles Alexander.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Davis.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Davis.;
  • 学科 History United States.;Sociology Ethnic and Racial Studies.;Environmental Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 267 p.
  • 总页数 267
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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