French Colonization: The Eurocentric Perspective vs. The Revisionist perspective
Colonization takes place when some people staunchly believe that the culture they are a part of and the lifestyle they follow is better, beneficial and therefore must be adopted by those that have a foreign feeling towards theirs. As Some comments in his magnum opus, Of Water and the Spirit, while explaining what happens under 'colonization',
Colonization begins from a feeling of superiority in Western, in this case exclusively European, countries; they believe in their right to own the land inhabited by others. A secondary but nonetheless important assumption under colonialism is the belief that the European culture is better, more productive and beneficial to its members. Hence it is justified in the minds of the colonizers that they enter a foreign land, displace the indigenous peoples from their homes and strip them of their cultures. Despite the fact that these cultures, with their accompanying rituals, traditions and religions, have been established for millennia, the colonizers maintain a belief that these cultures are backward, inferior and somehow harmful to their members. It is "for their own good" that these indigenous peoples are divided like spoils of war amongst colonizing nations... (Sullivan)
And thus, the history as well as the world witnessed various forms of the process of colonization among which French colonization is one. The French after losing the coast of Atlantic to the Spanish and English tied down all their hopes for survival to the "Mississippi River stretching south to the Gulf of Mexico" (French Colonization). This is because, the river side promised hope to the French to carry out trade of fur from there with minimum competition from both the English and the Spanish since the former was busy extracting advantages from the east coast while the latter was prepossessed with reaping benefits that Florida and Mexico offered. Thus, in the late seventeenth century, the French settlements began to emerge on the map of the world alongside the Mississippi River after the "reconnaissance missions by Jolliet and Marquette in 1673 and LaSalle and Tonti in the 1680s" (French Colonization). The settlements termed as the "American Bottoms" established a regular and cordial relationship with the French paving way for the foundation of New Orleans in the year 1718. In 1731, the town of Cahokia transmuted into a "full time settlement." "By 1752 a census revealed the French population of Cahokia to be about 136 people (Belting 1948:13-39). In 1766, the population had grown to about 500 people (Beck 1823:95)" (French Colonization). The pragmatic and conventional French settlement in this town revealed a great deal about the French architecture and French ways of living. "Traditionally, it conformed to the system of villages with common fields that was transplanted from France. It allowed the immigrants to share in a common culture and religion" (French Colonization). Pragmatically, this concentrated settlement offered protection against intrusion by other Europeans and Indians. This French culture was evident in the houses that existed on the soil of these settlements, the structure of which has been described by Governor Ford, in the following words:
The French houses were mostly built of hewn timber set upright in the ground, or upon plates laid upon a wall, the intervals between the upright pieces being filled with stone and mortar. Scarcely any of them were more than one story high with a porch on one or two sides, and sometimes all around, with low roofs extending with slopes of different steepness from the comb in the centre to the lowest part of the porch. These houses were generally placed in gardens, surrounded by fruit trees of apples, pears, cherries, and peaches; and in the villages each enclosure for a house and garden occupied a whole block or square, or the greater part of one. Each village had its Catholic Church and priest. The church was the great place of gay resort on Sundays and holidays, and the priest was the advisor and director and companion of all his flock.
Thus, French colonization like all other colonization brought about significant changes in the settlements where French people made colonies. These changes that the process of colonization brought and the way the French colonization made amendments in the varying cultures of the colonies that were later formed and the way this process of colonization contributed towards the history of economic development and paved way for the concept of capitalism is explained by two absolutely different schools of thought namely The Eurocentric historians and the Revisionist or the anti-Eurocentric historians.
The Eurocentric historians strongly uphold the "cultural arrogance" associated with "the real-or-alleged centrality...
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