La Ilustración sobre el río Hudson: ¿tenían filosofía los Mohawks?

In the historiography the Americanization has long been described as a dual process. First, Americanization has been described as the result of a long process of acculturation, of interbreeding, of métissage which would have affected both indigenous peoples and European settlers. Second, historians...

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Auteur principal: Stéphane Van Damme
Format: article
Langue:EN
FR
PT
Publié: Centre de Recherches sur les Mondes Américains 2020
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Accès en ligne:https://doaj.org/article/cfc3d116b3864a20a4a3dbad6d60872c
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Résumé:In the historiography the Americanization has long been described as a dual process. First, Americanization has been described as the result of a long process of acculturation, of interbreeding, of métissage which would have affected both indigenous peoples and European settlers. Second, historians have recently shown Americanization as the process by which European Creoles have claimed their Americanness, their independence from Europe, foreshadowing the decolonization of the early 19th century. Focusing on the weight of Britain beyond the American Revolution, historians have recently attempted to evaluate this deconstruction of an Anglo-American world by analyzing the culture of distance. Addressing the issue of Americanization through the theme of philosophy, this paper would like to explore the shift in eighteenth-century British curiosity for Amerindians from philosophy to material culture.