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Chapter 5: Part 1

Chapter 5: Part 1. Colonial North America & the Native Americans. SOC 327 Race & Ethnic Relations. The World Division of Labor: Racialized labor forms in the Periphery.

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Chapter 5: Part 1

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  1. Chapter 5: Part 1 Colonial North America & the Native Americans SOC 327 Race & Ethnic Relations

  2. The World Division of Labor: Racialized labor forms in the Periphery Racism as a world ideology evolved historically as a result of racial/ ethnic systems of labor segmentation & coercion in the colonial areas, and reinforced those systems => racism did not cause black slavery; African slavery was deliberately adopted as a “solution” to the perennial labor shortages in plantation America & this led to anti-black racism slowly emerging as ideology. Soc 327

  3. Theoretical Reappraisal Flow of causality: contact=>labor regimes=>ideological outcomes: (1) ethnocentrism/competition/ power differentials (Noel) => (2) systems of labor exploitation & institutional discrimination (colonial project) => (3) racism & racial legal codes (ideology/culture) Soc 327

  4. The Importance of Global Conditions of Incorporation The “moment” & “mode” of incorporation mattered greatly in the main forms of peoplehood that emerged & evolved in the colonial world: • Races • Castes • Nationalities OR Nations • Tribes • Ethnic groups Soc 327

  5. Noel’s Contact Hypothesis Enduring ethnic/racial stratification systems result from three necessary conditions at time of groups first historic moment of “contact”: • Ethnocentrism - the “who” to dominate • Competition - the “why” or "what for" to dominate • Power differential - the “how” to dominate Soc 327

  6. Three Incorporation Experiences in North America I. The Incorporation of the Indigeneous Peoples into the Colonial Americas II. The Incorporation of Africans into the Americas & the Atlantic Slave Trade III. The Incorporation of Mexican Americans into the United States Soc 327

  7. The North American Colonial Indian Incorporation Anomaly • Why were the North American Indians not enslaved, enserfed, indentured, or subjected to any form of coerced labor in colonial times? • Why were they first treated as free sovereign peoples & not conquered? • Why were they later subjected to military extermination after independence? Why so late (19 C.)? Soc 327

  8. Classic U.S. Textbook Explanations • Low Population thesis • Physical deficiency thesis • Cultural deficiency thesis • Military strength thesis • Difficult enforcement thesis • Relative profitability thesis • Puritan ethics thesis • Relative fear thesis Soc 327

  9. The Incorporation of the Indigenous Peoples into the Other Colonial America • Pan-Caribbean area 1500 - 1530 : indigenous slave trade = era of “disposable slavery”=> wiped out entire population • Mesoamerica & Andean World 1519-1810: slavery, mita, encomienda, repartimiento, hacienda debt-peonage, mission system => “Demographic Catastrophe” in Spanish America occurred in the XVI Century, and the surviving Indian population continued to decline throughout the entire colonial period, some as “Indian villages”, most others as hacienda peons Soc 327

  10. The Incorporation of the Indigenous Peoples into the Colonial Americas • Brazil: internal Indian slave trade system + the greatest African slave trade destination Combination led to great territorial expansion • British/French/Dutch Colonial North America: distinct colonial projects under perpetual inter-European war =>Non-coercive relations of trade & diplomacy with Native Americans for a century-and-a-half, followed in the republican period by state-sponsored genocide! Soc 327

  11. What’s fundamentally wrong with all of the U.S. theses? • Assume Indians were not enslaved elsewhere-they were 1500s to 1800s! • Assume the issue was “either/or” when it came to forcing Europeans, Africans, Indians to work: it was mostly “and”! • Assume the only, or main competition, ethnocentrism, power struggles were between Europeans vs Indians: it was not true in colonial North America! Soc 327

  12. Why are U.S. academic explanations so flawed? 1. Parochialism: They all assume purely local endogenous (“national”) causes, which are then theorized as universally applicable, when in fact the causes are a unique combination of exoganous (“global” & “regional”) causes & local processes 2. Ethnocentrism: They “read backward” into colonial history a racial consciousness and nation-building ethos only meaningful in the 19th Century, and dismiss the truly important inter-European conflicts & Indian-European cooperation of the colonial period Soc 327

  13. A Better Approach Reconcile the variety of historical experiences in the Americas within a single theoretical framework: • Combine world & regional & local analyses • Use (a) geostrategic and (b) economic factors to explain the different long-term socio-cultural outcomes, e.g., the different ways indigenous peoples were treated & socially located in the colonial Americas social hierarchies Soc 327

  14. I. The Geostrategic Factor in Colonial N. America A keygeopolitical rivalry existed in North America from 1580s (sinking of the Spanish Armada) to 1763 (the end of the Seven Year War) between the three rising world powers (Holland, England, France) => a ferocious & unregulated (“beyond the pale”) form of permanent warfare, a zero-sum game at the expense of each other & the old empire (Spain) Soc 327

  15. Geostrategic Consequences in Colonial N. America => The main competition & conflict in North America was between the Dutch, English, & French - not between them & the Indians => Each sought Indianmilitary allies & “buffer zones” rather than to capture & subjugate Indians labor (á la Spain & Portugal) Soc 327

  16. Geostrategic Consequences in Colonial N. America => Each practiced diplomacy and made treaties to forge lasting European /Indian alliances vs. other such alliances => Great emphasis on respecting the Indian social formations (authority systems, customs, etc.) Soc 327

  17. Two Axes of Colonial Conflict in North America 1. Constant conflict within each colony's Crown policies and “their” settlers’ demands for labor (planters), land (emancipated servants, immigrants), & souls (missionaries) 2. Constant warfare between European Crowns at settlers' expense (especially British) => Birth of British American white settler nationalism Soc 327

  18. European-side Evolution in N. America 1. 1559: Treaty of Cateau-Cambresis sanctioned all-out war “beyond the pale” & highly-regulated war in Europe 2. Spanish Armada sunk in 1588, left North America & Caribbean exposed to Dutch, English, French encroachments Soc 327

  19. European-side Evolution in N. America 3. The hegemonic Dutch got knocked out of North America (New Amsterdam) by the Anglo-Dutch Wars (1652 - 1672) 4. The French got knocked out of North America (Quebec) by the Anglo-French Wars (1680 - 1763). Britain thus became (briefly) supreme in North America Soc 327

  20. European-side Evolution in N. America 5. The British themselves got knocked out from North America by the 1776 (U.S.) white settler revolt & what remained British (Canada) was hastily upgraded from "colony" into a settler-controlled “dominion” of Great Britain - defused another potential settler revolt. This was compensated by the carving out of India as the new “jewel” of the British Empire! Soc 327

  21. II. The Economic Factor in N. America 1. No gold or silver wasfound in North America, and although tobacco colonies emerged early, the most profitable economicactivity for many decades was the Indianfur trade: • Indian men hunted the fur-carrying animals (beaver, deer, bison, etc.) while Indian women processed the fur: 1000s involved • Indians were by far the best suited for the job but they required arms& freedom Soc 327

  22. Social Division of Labor in N. America => Chronic labor shortages in North American plantation colonies was “solved” by the large-scale importation of (a) European indentured servants in the 17th C., and (b) African slaves thereafter => The Indians were consigned to fur production & military work, but in a rare labor form: non-coercive, collective, genderized, barter-based, socially-autonomous Soc 327

  23. Social Consequences for N. American Indigenous Peoples While Indians enjoyed an unparalleled era of freedom & recognition, and got metal wares, guns, powder, etc., their traditional cultures, societies, and complex web of relations as peoples were destabilized irreversibly and far beyond the areas of European presence Soc 327

  24. Native American-side Evolution 1. Inter-tribal conflicts, depletion of fauna, epidemics, and rampant consumerism greatly weakened (even decimated) many Indian peoples 2. After 1763, the Indians of North America were left exposed without any leverage, but as armed, proud occupiers of their lands, to face a growing, hostile power ruled by European-American settlers embued with a sense of white nationhood & Manifest Destiny in North America: the U.S.A. Soc 327

  25. Native American-side Evolution 3. Indians, long accustomed to being fully armed, mobile & free, and treated as sovereign nations, became subjected wholesale in the 19th Century to U.S. military campaigns of extermination, relocation, massive land usurpation, and the utmost physical & sociocultural degradation & marginalization of the survivors (250,000 Indians by 1890) Soc 327

  26. The Native American Colonial Experience in N. Am. Explained • It was every Crown's colonial policy to foster Indian alliances for geopolitical and economic reasons, at the expense of each other, Spain & even their settlers’ demands for land & labor • The North American Indians were indeed incorporated, but as freely trading fur-purveyors and via formalized (treaty) military alliances • The free era ended with the birth & expansion of the U.S.A.: XIX-Century ethnic cleansing state policies of military genocide, land confiscation, & reservations Soc 327

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