排序方式: 共有57条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
Here, we study the Algonquian and Iroquoian women who lived in settlements surrounding the Dutch colony of New Netherland,
in today’s northeastern United States. We begin by examining their roles in the colony and find that their lives did not fall
into the pattern of servitude, concubinage, culture-brokering, and intermarriage that many have seen as the fate of Native
or African women in other colonial societies. Instead, these women were, by and large, independent agents and followed their
own indigenous customs as they interacted with Europeans. We then go on to explore how this new revisionist view of their
actions affects archaeological interpretations of their households and the households of the Europeans as well. We further
point out how the role of Native women in New Netherland was influenced in part by the presence and absence of other groups
of women—both European and African—there. 相似文献
4.
5.
Principal Sir Donald MacAlister K.C.B. M.A. M.D. D.C.L. LL.D. D.Sc. 《Scottish Geographical Journal》2013,129(1):53-54
On the 25th Anniversary of the founding of the first Industrial Estate in Dundee this article reviews the industrial development of the city in the post‐war period and identifies the problems of two sectors of the city's industry, the traditional Jute industry and the modern estate based industries. The friction between the two in their post‐war development, and the effects of the change of emphasis in the city's industrial structure during that period, on the demographic and social geography of the city are also discussed. The article concludes with an outline of the possible lines of development for industry in Dundee, with reference being made to present Government economic planning policies for Scotland. 相似文献
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.