"That she shall be forever banished from this country": Alcohol, Sovereignty, and Social Segregation in New Netherland

E. Kramer
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

abstract:Alcohol was a subject of deep concern for Indigenous nations and settler governments in early America, but, though all agreed that the alcohol trade was dangerous, they did not assess the problem or its remedies in the same ways. This essay disaggregates seventeenth-century alcohol ordinances from their enforcement by examining laws and diplomacy as separate from court records. In considering prohibitions and prosecutions as distinct yet interrelated, it uncovers the differences between Indigenous and Dutch interpretations of alcohol's destructive effects to community and sovereignty. In the context of New Netherland diplomacy, Indigenous and settler authorities could reach consensus over alcohol trade prohibitions, but decisions about how to prosecute the laws fell to Dutch magistrates, who used alcohol cases to impose their particular visions of colonial communities upon ordinary settlers, especially women. Historians have long understood that ordinances regulating the alcohol trade were ineffective but have generally pointed to lax enforcement as the source of the laws' shortcomings. This essay focuses instead on examples of when the laws were strictly enforced, revealing how prosecutorial decision-making became a gendered method of enforcing segregation between settler and Indigenous populations, demarcating settler homes as off-limits to Indigenous people.
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“她将永远被驱逐出这个国家”:新荷兰的酒精、主权和社会隔离
酒精是美洲早期土著民族和移民政府深切关注的一个问题,但是,尽管他们都同意酒精贸易是危险的,但他们对问题的评估和补救方法却不尽相同。这篇文章通过将法律和外交与法庭记录分开来研究,将17世纪的酒精条例从其执行中分解出来。考虑到禁酒和起诉既不同又相互关联,它揭示了土著居民和荷兰人对酒精对社区和主权的破坏性影响的不同解释。在新荷兰外交的背景下,土著和移民当局可以就酒精贸易禁令达成共识,但如何起诉法律的决定落在了荷兰地方法官身上,他们利用酒精案件将他们对殖民社区的特殊看法强加给普通定居者,特别是妇女。历史学家早就明白,监管酒类贸易的法令是无效的,但他们普遍指出,执法不严是法律缺陷的根源。这篇文章将重点放在法律严格执行的例子上,揭示了起诉决策如何成为一种性别化的方法,在定居者和土著人口之间实施隔离,将定居者的房屋划定为土著人的禁区。
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0.30
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18
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