Article ID: CBB731524801

'The Country is Greatly Injured': Human-Animal Relationships, Ecology and the Fate of Empire in the Eighteenth Century Mississippi Valley Borderlands (2016)

unapi

At the end of the Seven Years' War, the British Empire made its most serious effort to establish control over the trans-Appalachian west when it sent soldiers and colonists to the formerly-French settlements of the so-called Illinois Country. Despite this region's abundant resources and the presence of sympathetic Illinois Indians in the area, the British effort failed dismally. This essay explains the weakness of the British in part by examining the special ecology of the tallgrass prairie and one of its most important non-human inhabitants, the bison. Exploring the central (though ignored) place of bison in the lives of the Illinois Indians – the easternmost bison people in North America – I show how the animal was more than just a source of calories; it was the basis of collaborative relationships between the Illinois and colonial newcomers throughout the eighteenth century. In particular, bison trade was the foundation of a strong accommodation between the Illinois and the French regime in the Mississippi Valley beginning in the late seventeenth century and lasting through the Seven Years' War. When the British arrived in the 1760s, various factors combined to deplete the bison herds in the region, which in turn undermined the possibility of close diplomacy between the British and the Native people. Far from a simple story of aggressive newcomers and the commodification of nature, this was a scenario in which policy, ecology and imperial rivalries were all entangled, each affecting the other. This essay thus tells a new story, not just about a key chapter of imperial history in the early West, but also about a little-known bison culture at the very edge of the prairie-woodlands divide.

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Authors & Contributors
Lester, Alan
Banerjee, Sukanya
Paul G. Keil
Shibani Bose
Rose, Deborah Bird
Chrulew, Matthew
Journals
Victorian Literature and Culture
Human Ecology: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Transfers
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Nineteenth-Century Contexts
Antiquity
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Cambridge University Press
Voltaire Foundation
University of California Press
Palgrave Macmillan
Columbia University Press
Concepts
Trade
Nature and its relationship to culture; human-nature relationships
Imperialism
Ecology
Colonialism
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
People
Cook, James
Shaler, William
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
20th century
Ancient
Enlightenment
21st century
Places
Great Britain
Europe
India
Indian Ocean
Pacific Ocean
St. Helena
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