British women travellers and constructions of racial difference across the nineteenth-century American West

被引:26
|
作者
Morin, KM [1 ]
机构
[1] Bucknell Univ, Dept Geog, Lewisburg, PA 17837 USA
关键词
nineteenth-century American West; British travel-writing; Native Americans; post-colonial studies; railroad travel;
D O I
10.1111/j.0020-2754.1998.00311.x
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
At a time coinciding historically with the height of the British Empire, the immigrants' rush to occupy American West lands and the wholesale removal of Native Americans onto reservations, encounters between Native peoples and British women travellers became emblematic of a whole range of socio-spatial relationships of domination, subordination and resistance. In this paper, I examine representations of western Native Americans in the travelogues of ten British women travellers to the late nineteenth-century American West, produced primarily during encounters at sites along the western rail lines. Constructions of racial and gender differences in the texts can be tied to British colonial discourses, as well as to the social relations inherent in the multiple contact zones within which the encounters took place.
引用
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页码:311 / 330
页数:20
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