(71)Calloway,The American Revolution in Indian Country,pp.291,301. (72)James H.Merrell,Review of The American Revolution in Indian Country:Crisis and Diversity in Native American Communities by Colin G.Calloway,The William and Mary Quarterly,Third Series,Vol.53,No.3(July,1996),pp.637-639. (73)Max M.Mintz,Seeds of Empire:The American Revolutionary Conquest of the Iroquois,New York:New York University Press,1999. (74)Alan Taylor,The Divided Ground:Indians,Settlers,and the Northern Borderland of the American Revolution,New York:Alfred A.Knopf,2006,p.8. (75)Nash,The Unknown American Revolution,pp.66-72. (76)Robert A.Gross,Review of Liberty's Daughters and Women of the Republic,The William and Mary Quarterly,Third Series,Vol.39,No.1(Jan.,1982),p.232. (77)Mary Beth Norton,Liberty's Daughters:The Revolutionary Experience of American Women,1750-1800,Boston:Little,Brown and Company,1980,see especially pp.xiv-xv,155-156,195,228-229,256,298-299. (78)Linda K.Kerber,Women of the Republic:Intellect and Ideology in Revolutionary America,Chapel Hill:The University of North Carolina Press,1980,see especially pp.8-12,35-36,139,159,183-184,231. (79)Gross,Review of Liberty's Daughters and Women of the Republic,The William and Mary Quarterly,pp.231-238. (80)Joan R.Gundersen,To Be Useful to the World:Women in Revolutionary America,1740-1790,New York:Twayne Publishers,Inc.,1996; Holly A.Mayer,Review of To Be Useful to the World by Joan R.Gundersen,The William and Mary Quarterly,Third Series,Vol.55,No.2(Apr.,1998),pp.308-310. (81)Jameson,The American Revolution Considered as a Social Movement,see especially pp.26,32,47,77,79,81,83-90. (82)Bernard Bailyn,The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution,Enlarged Edition,Cambridge,Mass.:The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press,1992,p.302. (83)Gordon S.Wood,The Creation of the American Republic,1776-1787,New York:W.W.Norton & Company,1972,p.91. (84)Young,"American Historians Confront 'The Transforming Hand of Revolution'," in Hoffman,et al.,eds.,The Transforming Hand of Revolution,pp.369-372. (85)从戴维·拉姆齐开始,“人民的革命”就是美国革命史著作中常见的提法。不过,在新美国革命史学形成之前,这里的“人民”要么是泛指作为抽象整体的美国人,要么是特指参与和支持革命的白人男性。 (86)Nash,The Unknown American Revolution,pp.xvi-xvii. (87)Young,The Shoemaker and the Tea Party,pp.185-186. (88)Nash,The Unknown American Revolution,p.xxviii. (89)Raphael,A People's History of the American Revolution,pp.7-8,301-305. (90)Young,Nash,and Raphael,eds.,The Revolutionary Founders,pp.4-5. (91)Bouton,Taming Democracy,pp.3,4,87,105,195.
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