On a few of the many reasons why a pilgrimage to Plimoth is well worth your
time.
The museum and historic site at Plimoth Plantation is a hugely interesting
and significant AmericanStudies space for at least three distinct, if
interconnected, reasons. For one thing, since the Plantation’s origins in the
late 1940s, it has worked to create what is usually known as a
living history museum, a site in which highly trained and educated
“interpreters” reenact the identities and voices and perspectives of early 17th
century Pilgrims. The work done by such living history museums has become an
increasing subject for scholarly research and analysis; it’s not unrelated to
Civil War reenactments, but with an explicit and central emphasis on education,
with the reenactors not so much fulfilling their own interests or passions (as
do Civil War reenactors) as seeking to connect audiences to the people and
period they’re recreating. The performers are exceptionally good at what they
do, almost disconcertingly so; for an AmericanStudier like me, it’s difficult
to talk to them without trying constantly to break the fourth wall and discuss
their own choices and goals—but it’s well worth the effort, as they always have
something new and interesting to say.
If those living history components
to Plimoth go back many decades, the second AmericanStudies element is
significantly more recent. Just a few hundred yards from the Plantation
recreation is the Wampanoag Homesite,
a very different kind of living history: while the Homesite’s spaces and
places, its tools and cooking processes and the like, are indeed recreations of
their 17th century equivalents, the staff of Native Americans (many
Wampanoag, but others from various other nations) exist entirely in our 21st
century moment, providing their own perspectives on the historical, cultural,
and national questions to which the site connects. More broadly, the Homesite
illustrates just how fully and to my mind successfully Plimoth has worked in
the last few decades to provide a historical and educational experience that
does full justice to the Wampanoag
community and stories. Certainly it’s possible to experience the Homesite
and Plantation as two very distinct and separate spaces, an effect that could
be called a component to multicultural American history and identity more
generally; but at least in part the job of the Plantation is to tell each part
of the story, and then to allow its audiences to consider for themselves how
those parts and communities interconnect.
Yet the Plantation’s third
AmericanStudies element exemplifies the site’s most complex but, I would
(unsurprisingly) argue, its most crucial goal: highlighting the ultimately and
fundamentally interconnected stories and identities of the Pilgrims and the
Wampanoag. This element, the
orientation film, is one that at many museums would likely be the least
interesting or innovative feature; but at Plimoth the current film, entitled “Two
Peoples: One Story,” was produced by the History Channel and is, despite
its relatively straightforward basic agenda (to introduce arriving audiences to
what they’ll find out at the Plantation and Homesite), a complex and very
impressive work. For example, the Wampanoag characters/actors in the film speak
in the Wampanoag language, a small detail that is anything but when we
recognize the long history of Native American languages being silenced or even
actively repressed in favor of English. Yet it’s really the film’s title that
reflects its most impressive quality, its consistent insistence on
cross-cultural story- and history-telling, on narrating the stories of these
two communities as, from those first 1620 moments down to the present museum
experience, entirely and crucially intertwined. That doesn’t meant that the
film elides the more destructive results of contact for the Wampanoag
nation—far from it—but it does give every arriving visitor a clear reminder
that the story of Plimoth Plantation is a story of multiple cultures coexisting
and conversing and influencing one another in every way, from the most negative
to the most potentially inspiring.
Next daytrip tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Thoughts on this site? Other daytrips you’d highlight?
On Facebook, a former student highlights "Heritage Museum & Gardens (http://heritagemuseumsandgardens.org/) & Sandwich Glass Museum (www.sandwichglassmuseum.org/)."
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