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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要本文运用社会学和人类学的批判性概念来审视“消失的印第安人”的刻板印象,揭示其矛盾性。文章认为在James Fenimore Cooper 19世纪40年代后期的小说中出现了一种类型的美国印第安人他在很多方面都可以被看作是一个正在消失的印第安人因为他表现出了某种程度的同化但同时他也表现出了对消失和边缘化过程的惊人的抵抗。他独特的生存方式和他的生活方式表现出一定程度的文化适应,这与杰拉尔德·维齐诺的生存方式很接近我提出了一个术语,关键整合。我的研究基于Susquesus(别名Trackless), Cooper在《Littlepage手稿》中不太知名的角色,这是一部由三本书组成的家庭传奇。
Assimilating American Indians in James Fenimore Cooper’s Novels?
Abstract The article employs critical concepts from sociology and anthropology to examine the stereotype of the Vanishing Indian and disclose its contradictory character. The article argues that in James Fenimore Cooper’s late novels from the 1840s a type of American Indian appears who can be regarded as a Vanishing Indian in many respects as he displays some slight degree of assimilation but at the same time he can be found to reveal a surprising amount of resistance to the process of vanishing and marginalization. His peculiar mode of survival and his mode of living demonstrate a certain degree of acculturation, which comes close to Gerald Vizenor’s survivance and for which I propose a term critical integration. I base my study on Susquesus (alias Trackless), Cooper’s less well-known character from The Littlepage Manuscripts, a three-book family saga.