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Constructing and contesting color lines: Tidewater native peoples and Indianness in Jim Crow Virginia.

机译:构造和争辩色线:潮汐的原住民和吉姆·克罗·弗吉尼亚的印第安人。

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摘要

Indian peoples in the United States have faced many challenges to their group and individual identities as Native Americans over centuries of cultural exchange, demographic change, violence, and dispossession. For Native Americans in the South those challenges have arisen in the context of the idea of "race" as a two-part black-white social, cultural, and political system. This dissertation explores how groups and individuals in tidewater Virginia created, re-created, claimed, re-claimed, retained and maintained identities as Indians after the Civil War and into the 1950s, weathering decades of the ever-stranger career of Jim Crow. They did this in the face of varied pressures from white Virginians who devoted enormous political and social effort to the construction of race as a simple binary division between black and white people.;In the era after the Civil War, tidewater Indians coped by creating new tribal organizations, churches, and schools, presenting theatrical productions that used pan-Indian symbols, and maintaining separations from their African American neighbors. To some extent, they acquiesced in whites' notions about the "inferior" racialized status of African Americans. In late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century tidewater Virginia, while contending with, and sometimes adapting, popular ideas about "race" and "blood purity," organized tidewater Virginia Indians also drew from a sense of their shared histories as descendants of the Algonquian Powhatan groups, and from pan-Indian imagery. This project explores how popular ideas about "race" shaped their world and their efforts to position themselves as red rather than black or white, while whites worked to construct "race" along a black-white "color line."
机译:在过去的几个世纪的文化交流,人口变化,暴力和剥夺中,作为印第安人的美国印第安人民面临着许多群体和个人身份的挑战。对于南方的美洲原住民来说,这些挑战是在“种族”这一由两部分组成的黑白社会,文化和政治体系的背景下提出的。本文探讨了南水战后到1950年代,潮水弗吉尼亚州的团体和个人如何创造,重新创造,主张,重新主张,保留和维持印第安人的身份,度过了数十年来吉姆·克罗(Jim Crow)千辛万苦的职业生涯。面对白人弗吉尼亚人施加的巨大压力,他们付出了巨大的政治和社会努力,将种族建设为黑人和白人之间的简单二元划分。在内战之后,潮水印第安人通过创造新的种族来应对部落组织,教堂和学校,展示使用泛印度符号的戏剧作品,并与非裔美国人邻居保持隔离。在某种程度上,他们默认了白人关于非洲裔美国人“劣等”种族化地位的观点。在19世纪末和20世纪初的潮水弗吉尼亚州,虽然与“种族”和“血液纯净”的流行观念相抗衡,有时甚至有所适应,但有组织的潮水弗吉尼亚州印第安人还是阿尔冈奎安人的后代,他们从共同的历史感中汲取了灵感。 Powhatan团体,以及来自泛印度的图像。该项目探索有关“种族”的流行观念如何塑造他们的世界,以及他们如何努力将自己定位为红色而不是黑色或白色,而白人则沿着黑白“色线”构造“种族”。

著录项

  • 作者

    Feller, Laura Janet.;

  • 作者单位

    The George Washington University.;

  • 授予单位 The George Washington University.;
  • 学科 American Studies.;Sociology Ethnic and Racial Studies.;History United States.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2009
  • 页码 391 p.
  • 总页数 391
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 美洲史;民族学;
  • 关键词

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