北方革命时期易洛魁人的食物外交

Rachel B. Herrmann
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摘要

这一章详述了印第安人如何利用饥饿进行反击。在1779年夏天,美国叛军发动了一场毁灭性的粮食战争,今天被称为沙利文战役,对抗英国的易洛魁盟友。远征之后发生了两个主要的相关变化。首先,到18世纪80年代,英国人对易洛魁人饥饿的描述让大多数官员把印第安人想象成有用的嘴巴,他们可以忽视饥饿,同时也需要更多的粮食。这种对易洛魁人饥饿的看法的改变产生了第二个变化:易洛魁人的食物外交被改造成比以前更暴力的东西。在美国独立战争中,易洛魁人的食物外交在某种程度上是由共同禁食构成的——这是印第安人有时不得不通过使用侵略来强制执行的政策。这种外交政策考虑到了印第安人对某些类型的规定的要求,迫使非原住民走出自己的方式来适应当地人的口味。美国独立战争摧毁了包括易洛魁人在内的印第安社区,但是,在战争期间,英国人对饥饿的印第安人的看法发生了变化,这使得易洛魁人能够挑战权力关系的状态,当时同时代的人认为他们在作物破坏和土地损失面前无能为力。易洛魁人无视和忍受饥饿的能力使他们的英国盟友不可能认为他们是无用的嘴巴。
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Iroquois Food Diplomacy in the Revolutionary North
This chapter details how Indians used hunger to fight back. During the summer of 1779, the rebel American army mounted a devastating victual-warfare campaign, known today as the Sullivan Campaign, against Britain's Iroquois allies. Two major related changes occurred after the expedition. First, British descriptions of Iroquois hunger by the 1780s allowed most officials to envision Indians as useful mouths who could overlook hunger while also requiring more provisions. This altered perception of Iroquois hunger created a second change: a reworking of Iroquoian food diplomacy into something more violent than its previous iterations. Iroquoian food diplomacy in the American Revolution was constituted, in part, by mutual fasting—a policy the Indians sometimes had to enforce through the use of aggression. This diplomacy took Indian requests for certain types of provisions into account, obliging non-Natives to go out of their way to accommodate Native tastes. The American Revolution ravaged Indian communities, including Iroquois ones, but, during the war, changing British perceptions of hungry Indians allowed the Iroquois to challenge the state of power relations at a time when contemporaries assumed they were powerless in the face of crop destruction and land losses. Iroquois abilities to ignore and endure hunger made it impossible for their British allies to think of them as useless mouths.
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5. Fighting Hunger, Fearing Violence after the Revolutionary War 4. Black Victual Warriors and Hunger Creation 1. Hunger, Accommodation, and Violence in Colonial America Victual Imperialism and U.S. Indian Policy Conclusion: Why Native and Black Revolutionaries Lost the Fight
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