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'Something Terrible Happened Here' Memory and Battlefield Preservation in the Construction of Race, Place, and Nation.

机译:种族,地方和民族建设中的“可怕的事情发生在这里”记忆和战场保护。

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摘要

This dissertation considers the changing place of race at nationally preserved battlefields from the Civil War and Indian Wars. As sites of contestation and carnage, these preserved spaces serve as strong indicators of the power of place that dominated America's ethos and national identity during the nineteenth century. The battles themselves resulted from power struggles over land, property, economic expansionism, and race-based debates. These conflicts over place and people did not end with a defeat or victory on the battlefield. They transitioned into a second phase that continued to use battlefields as sites of negotiation over racial entitlement and disenfranchisement. This dissertation argues that preserved battlefields are landscapes expansive in nature, crossing time and space. They are not evidence of one year, one day, or one event. These battlefields actually reproduce historic environments to fit the needs of those preserving and viewing them. In other words, the spaces are cultural landscapes, representing constructed spaces reflecting the processes in which culture—and cultural conflict—manipulates, affects, and frames nature over the long twentieth century (1865-present). While contending with the challenges of contemporary America, preservationists and visitors used these battlefields to contribute to the larger national project intent on (re)defining who had the power and access to be included in the national narrative.;Historically, the Anglo male dominated collective memory on the preserved battlefields. As such, it is presumed that these battlefields are purely masculine and Anglo in nature. This dissertation indicates that this is not the case. Sentimentalism was a key tool utilized by preservationists to control memories. Through sentimentalism, battlefields became semi-fictitious spaces based on selective and dramatic accounts of the past. They did not preserve a pure narrative of nineteenth century warfare; instead, they preserved desired interpretations of the past to better serve the present. Today, Native Americans and African Americans utilize preserved battlefields to present their own voices, inserting themselves into the nation's collective memory. It is the ongoing relationship between memory, nature, and nineteenth century warfare that is at the heart of this research.
机译:本文考虑了内战和印度战争在国家保留的战场上种族的变化。作为争夺和屠杀的场所,这些保存完好的空间可以作为强有力的标志,表明在19世纪统治美国精神和民族认同的地方的力量。这场斗争本身是由于土地,财产,经济扩张主义以及基于种族的辩论而进行的权力斗争。这些冲突到位,人们并没有以战场上的失败或胜利而告终。他们过渡到第二阶段,继续使用战场作为就种族权利和剥夺公民权利进行谈判的场所。本文认为,保留的战场是自然界,时空跨越的景观。它们不是一年,一天或一个事件的证据。这些战场实际上是在重现历史环境,以适应那些保存和查看它们的需求。换句话说,这些空间是文化景观,代表构建的空间,反映了在二十世纪漫长的18世纪(1865-现在)中文化和文化冲突在操纵,影响和构筑自然的过程。在面对当代美国的挑战的同时,保护主义者和参观者利用这些战场为旨在(重新)界定谁有权并进入国家叙事的更大的国家项目做出了贡献;从历史上看,盎格鲁男性主导着集体在保留的战场上的记忆。因此,假定这些战场本质上是纯粹的男性化和盎格鲁。这表明事实并非如此。情感主义是保存主义者用来控制记忆的关键工具。通过情感主义,战场成为对过去的选择性和戏剧性描述的半虚拟空间。他们并没有保留19世纪战争的纯粹叙述。相反,他们保留了对过去的期望解释,以更好地服务于现在。如今,美洲原住民和非裔美国人利用保留下来的战场来表达自己的声音,从而将自己融入国家的集体记忆中。这项研究的核心是记忆,自然与19世纪战争之间的持续关系。

著录项

  • 作者

    Hall, Susan Chase.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Riverside.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Riverside.;
  • 学科 History United States.;History Military.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 483 p.
  • 总页数 483
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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