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Proper women/propertied women: Federal land laws and gender order(s) in the nineteenth-century imperial American west.

机译:适当的妇女/有资格的妇女:19世纪的美国帝国西部的联邦土地法律和性别秩序。

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摘要

This study explores the relationship between federal land policy and women's property rights in the nineteenth-century American West, analyzing women's responses to expanded property rights under the 1850 Oregon Donation Act, the Homestead Act of 1862, and the 1887 General Allotment Act, and the ways in which the demands of empire building shaped legislators' decisions to grant such rights to women. These laws addressed women's property rights only in relation to their marital status, and solely because women figured prominently in the national project of westward expansion. Women utilized these property rights to both engage in the process of empire building, and to challenge the imperial order, primarily as it related to the re-construction of the American gender order.;As women moved westward (or experienced the impact of such movement) in the nineteenth century they encountered and contested ideas about race, gender, and citizenship that were inextricably linked to federal land policies. White women in Oregon, African American and white women homesteaders on the Kansas prairies, and Nez Perce women forced onto a reservation in Idaho shared the experience of becoming property owners. For white women, this meant new rights, granted with the implied responsibility of modeling proper gender behaviors, from marriage to childrearing and domesticity. For indigenous women, this meant assimilation to a new gender order through the restructuring of conceptions of property ownership and rights, and compliance with dominant ideas about marriage and gender roles. Because they were the most invisible female population in the imperial project, African American women slipped through the knotty discussions about women and property, their race prohibiting them from consideration as appropriate models of civilized behavior and proper gender relations.;Despite their differences, through their status as land owners, women shared the experience of being players in an imperial game that demanded them to negotiate a rocky terrain, littered with the racialized and gendered expectations which accompanied the efforts to establish a western American empire.
机译:这项研究探索了19世纪美国西部联邦土地政策与妇女财产权之间的关系,分析了妇女根据1850年《俄勒冈州捐赠法》,1862年的《宅基地法》和1887年的《总体分配法》对扩大的财产权的应对措施,以及建立帝国的要求塑造了立法者赋予妇女这种权利的决定。这些法律仅针对妇女的婚姻状况,仅因为妇女在国家向西扩张的国家计划中占重要地位而涉及妇女的财产权。妇女利用这些财产权参与了帝国建设的过程,并挑战了帝国秩序,主要是因为它与美国性别秩序的重建有关。随着妇女向西迁移(或经历了这种运动的影响) ),他们在19世纪遇到了与种族,性别和公民身份有关的观念,这些观念与联邦土地政策密不可分。俄勒冈州的白人妇女,堪萨斯州大草原上的非洲裔美国人和白人妇女作为家庭主妇,爱达荷州的内兹珀斯人妇女被迫保留,他们分享了成为财产所有人的经验。对于白人妇女来说,这意味着要赋予新的权利,其中包括了对适当的性别行为建模的隐性责任,从婚姻到育儿再到家庭。对于土著妇女而言,这意味着通过对财产所有权和权利的概念进行重组,并遵守关于婚姻和性别角色的主流观念,来融入新的性别秩序。由于非裔女性是帝国计划中最隐形的女性人口,非洲裔美国妇女在有关妇女和财产的棘手讨论中脱口而出,她们的种族使她们无法被视为文明行为和适当性别关系的适当模式。作为土地所有者,妇女分享了在帝国游戏中的角色经验,该游戏要求她们在崎rock的地形上进行谈判,并充满种族和性别期望,伴随着建立西美帝国的努力。

著录项

  • 作者

    Compton, Tonia M.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of Nebraska - Lincoln.;

  • 授予单位 The University of Nebraska - Lincoln.;
  • 学科 History United States.;Womens Studies.;Native American Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2009
  • 页码 327 p.
  • 总页数 327
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 美洲史;社会学;
  • 关键词

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