拓荒者,弑父者,以及殖民家庭和历史中的暴力幽灵

IF 0.2 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY REVIEWS IN AMERICAN HISTORY Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1353/rah.2023.a911210
Katrina Jagodinsky
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Boag borrows an approach from Foucault to offer readers an \"ethnology of parricide\" (p. 9) that links a horrific \"fifteen or so minutes\" to \"the westward expansion of the United States, rural and agricultural decline, the consolidation of market capitalism, political change, environmental transformation, race and labor, penal reform and the evolution of justice, religion and the meaning of death, and the especially intimate matters of childhood, family, gender relations, and memory\" (p. 10).3 What unfolds is a compelling story that incorporates a diverse set of analytical methods to describe an eighteen year-old's parricide and murder in the 1895 Willamette Valley and explain \"why children kill their parents–a question that has haunted humanity since humanity has haunted the world\" (p. 217). [End Page 143] At the core of Boag's study is Loyd Montgomery's parricide of his father and mother, John and Elizabeth, and murder of neighbor Daniel McKercher on 19 November, 1895. The eldest of five siblings at eighteen, Loyd stood at the intersection of boyhood and manhood, though his heinous actions ensured he would face execution before completing that transformation—unless we believe his murderous acts marked the end of his childhood. His parents, John and Elizabeth, were the children of Oregon founding families who had themselves practiced genocidal anti-Indian violence to secure their settler-colonial claims to the Willamette Valley in the 1840s and 1850s. As adults and parents of the Valley's third settler generation, the Montgomerys struggled to keep their footing amid the financial ruin that many rural farming communities faced at the close of the nineteenth century despite the tremendous wealth their relatives had accumulated through settler-colonial measures of dispossession that included the Donation Land Claim Act of 1850. Daniel McKercher arrived in the Willamette Valley less than a decade before his murder, perhaps maintaining financial success because he emigrated with his parents from Canada in his twenties and remained single into his thirties. He was active in local fraternal organizations, widely respected in his community, and operated a gristmill in partnership with his brother. Concerned about his neighbor's dire straits, McKercher extended credit to John Montgomery, who at the time of his death owned no real property and left no estate for his four innocent children—all of whom lived with their widowed paternal grandmother after their parents' death. Boag recounts this event, and the circumstances leading to it, with elegant prose and engaging detail. The majority of his sources are local newspaper accounts, with the addition of regional and national coverage of the crime itself. He supplements newspapers with pioneer reminiscences and manuscripts, social and vital statistics, state reports, and county histories. He employs cultural, economic, environmental, and gender analysis to broaden the significance of Loyd Montgomery's 1895 murders, quickly acquainting readers with the bonds and troubles Willamette Valley residents shared together. 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Boag borrows an approach from Foucault to offer readers an \\\"ethnology of parricide\\\" (p. 9) that links a horrific \\\"fifteen or so minutes\\\" to \\\"the westward expansion of the United States, rural and agricultural decline, the consolidation of market capitalism, political change, environmental transformation, race and labor, penal reform and the evolution of justice, religion and the meaning of death, and the especially intimate matters of childhood, family, gender relations, and memory\\\" (p. 10).3 What unfolds is a compelling story that incorporates a diverse set of analytical methods to describe an eighteen year-old's parricide and murder in the 1895 Willamette Valley and explain \\\"why children kill their parents–a question that has haunted humanity since humanity has haunted the world\\\" (p. 217). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《拓荒者,弑父者,以及移民-殖民家庭和历史中的暴力幽灵》卡特里娜·雅戈金斯基(传记)彼得·博格,《拓荒者的死亡:世纪之交俄勒冈州少年时代的暴力》。西雅图:太平洋西北研究中心与华盛顿大学出版社合作,2022年。xii + 298页。数字,地图,图表,注释,参考书目和索引。美国人每天都在努力应对各种战线上的政治和个人暴力。警察的不作为和暴力的交替,对性别和种族动机的大规模枪击事件的解释失败,以及儿童在暴力事件中令人心碎的中心地位——受害者和肇事者——让许多旁观者绝望地想知道这些行为是如何变得如此明显的美国人。一群学者正专注于这个问题:犯罪学家、律师、政治学家、心理学家、社会学家,以及运用各自独特工具和方法的历史学家在关注美国暴力特点的历史学家中,有一些专门研究北美西部的人,在大众的想象中,在大多数学术研究中,北美西部的特点是基本上是暴力的彼得·博格(Peter Boag)的最新著作《开拓性的死亡:世纪之交俄勒冈州少年时代的暴力》(2022)加入了这一讨论,他认为暴力是美国文化,尤其是开拓性文化的内在特征。Boag借用了福柯的一种方法,为读者提供了一种“弑父的民族学”(第9页),将可怕的“十五分钟左右”与“美国的西向扩张、农村和农业的衰落、市场资本主义的巩固、政治变革、环境转型、种族和劳工、刑罚改革和司法的演变、宗教和死亡的意义,以及童年、家庭、性别关系和记忆等特别亲密的问题”(第10页)联系起来这是一个引人入胜的故事,它结合了一系列不同的分析方法,描述了1895年威拉米特山谷一个18岁男孩的弑父和谋杀,并解释了“为什么孩子会杀死他们的父母——自从人类困扰世界以来,这个问题一直困扰着人类”(第217页)。Boag研究的核心是lloyd Montgomery在1895年11月19日杀害了他的父亲和母亲John和Elizabeth,并谋杀了邻居Daniel McKercher。劳埃德在18岁时是五个兄弟姐妹中的老大,处于少年和成年的交汇处,尽管他令人发指的行为使他在完成转变之前面临处决——除非我们相信他的杀人行为标志着他童年的结束。他的父母约翰(John)和伊丽莎白(Elizabeth)是俄勒冈州创始家族的孩子,他们自己在19世纪40年代和50年代实施了种族灭绝的反印第安暴力,以确保他们对威拉米特山谷(Willamette Valley)的移民殖民主张。作为山谷第三代移民的成年人和父母,蒙哥马利一家努力在十九世纪末许多农村农业社区面临的财政危机中站稳了自己的立场,尽管他们的亲戚通过1850年《捐赠土地索赔法》等移民-殖民剥夺措施积累了巨额财富。丹尼尔·麦克切尔(Daniel McKercher)在被谋杀前不到十年来到威拉米特山谷,也许他之所以能保持经济上的成功,是因为他20多岁时随父母从加拿大移民过来,30多岁时一直单身。他活跃于当地的兄弟会组织,在社区中广受尊敬,并与他的兄弟合伙经营一个磨粉机。考虑到邻居的困境,McKercher对John Montgomery给予了信任,他在去世时没有不动产,也没有给他的四个无辜的孩子留下遗产——他们在父母去世后都和守寡的祖母住在一起。Boag以优雅的文笔和引人入胜的细节叙述了这一事件,以及导致它的环境。他的大部分消息来源都是当地报纸的报道,加上对犯罪本身的地区性和全国性报道。他在报纸上补充先驱者的回忆和手稿、社会和人口统计、州报告和县历史。他运用文化、经济、环境和性别分析来拓展1895年劳埃德·蒙哥马利谋杀案的意义,迅速让读者了解了威拉米特山谷居民之间的联系和共同的困境。熟悉博格前科的读者……
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Pioneers, Parricides, and the Spectre of Violence in Settler-Colonial Homes and Histories
Pioneers, Parricides, and the Spectre of Violence in Settler-Colonial Homes and Histories Katrina Jagodinsky (bio) Peter Boag, Pioneering Death: The Violence of Boyhood in Turn-of-the-Century Oregon. Seattle: Center for the Study of the Pacific Northwest in association with University of Washington Press, 2022. xii + 298 pp. Figures, maps, chart, notes, bibliography, and index. $30.00 Americans are grappling with everyday political and personal violence on a variety of fronts. Escalating frustrations with alternating police inaction and violence, failed explanations of gender- and racially motivated mass-shootings, and the heartbreaking centrality of children in this violence—as both victims and perpetrators—leave many onlookers desperate to understand how these acts have come to be so distinctly American. A cadre of scholars are focused on this problem: criminologists, lawyers, political scientists, psychologists, sociologists, and, applying their own unique set of tools and methodologies, historians.1 Among the historians concerned with the peculiarities of American violence are those who specialize in the North American West, a region characterized in the popular imagination and in most scholarly treatments as fundamentally violent.2 Peter Boag's most recent book, Pioneering Death: The Violence of Boyhood in Turn-of-the-Century Oregon (2022), joins this conversation, arguing that violence is intrinsic to American culture, particularly pioneering culture. Boag borrows an approach from Foucault to offer readers an "ethnology of parricide" (p. 9) that links a horrific "fifteen or so minutes" to "the westward expansion of the United States, rural and agricultural decline, the consolidation of market capitalism, political change, environmental transformation, race and labor, penal reform and the evolution of justice, religion and the meaning of death, and the especially intimate matters of childhood, family, gender relations, and memory" (p. 10).3 What unfolds is a compelling story that incorporates a diverse set of analytical methods to describe an eighteen year-old's parricide and murder in the 1895 Willamette Valley and explain "why children kill their parents–a question that has haunted humanity since humanity has haunted the world" (p. 217). [End Page 143] At the core of Boag's study is Loyd Montgomery's parricide of his father and mother, John and Elizabeth, and murder of neighbor Daniel McKercher on 19 November, 1895. The eldest of five siblings at eighteen, Loyd stood at the intersection of boyhood and manhood, though his heinous actions ensured he would face execution before completing that transformation—unless we believe his murderous acts marked the end of his childhood. His parents, John and Elizabeth, were the children of Oregon founding families who had themselves practiced genocidal anti-Indian violence to secure their settler-colonial claims to the Willamette Valley in the 1840s and 1850s. As adults and parents of the Valley's third settler generation, the Montgomerys struggled to keep their footing amid the financial ruin that many rural farming communities faced at the close of the nineteenth century despite the tremendous wealth their relatives had accumulated through settler-colonial measures of dispossession that included the Donation Land Claim Act of 1850. Daniel McKercher arrived in the Willamette Valley less than a decade before his murder, perhaps maintaining financial success because he emigrated with his parents from Canada in his twenties and remained single into his thirties. He was active in local fraternal organizations, widely respected in his community, and operated a gristmill in partnership with his brother. Concerned about his neighbor's dire straits, McKercher extended credit to John Montgomery, who at the time of his death owned no real property and left no estate for his four innocent children—all of whom lived with their widowed paternal grandmother after their parents' death. Boag recounts this event, and the circumstances leading to it, with elegant prose and engaging detail. The majority of his sources are local newspaper accounts, with the addition of regional and national coverage of the crime itself. He supplements newspapers with pioneer reminiscences and manuscripts, social and vital statistics, state reports, and county histories. He employs cultural, economic, environmental, and gender analysis to broaden the significance of Loyd Montgomery's 1895 murders, quickly acquainting readers with the bonds and troubles Willamette Valley residents shared together. Readers familiar with Boag's prior...
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Reviews in American History provides an effective means for scholars and students of American history to stay up to date in their discipline. Each issue presents in-depth reviews of over thirty of the newest books in American history. Retrospective essays examining landmark works by major historians are also regularly featured. The journal covers all areas of American history including economics, military history, women in history, law, political history and philosophy, religion, social history, intellectual history, and cultural history. Readers can expect continued coverage of both traditional and new subjects of American history, always blending the recognition of recent developments with the ongoing importance of the core matter of the field.
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Author-title-Reviewer Index for Volume 51 (2023) Nothing to Smile About: Quaker Capitalism and the Conquest of the Ohio Valley The Topology of Tree Time Apaches in Unexpected Places The Tragedy of Phrenology and Physiognomy
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