[On July 30th,
1676 Nathaniel Bacon issued his “Declaration
in the Name of the People,” kicking off Bacon’s Rebellion. So this week
I’ll AmericanStudy that rebellion and other 17th century histories,
leading up to a special weekend post on some of Virginia’s historic sites!]
On a different and more inspiring vision of
the arrival era.
If you’ve been well trained by a
literary analyzer like this AmericanStudier, one of your main responses to the
new definition of cross-cultural American diversity I first advanced in this
space in my
December 5, 2011 post (and have returned to in many others since) might be
“So what?” I tried to address some of the broadest national narratives that
could be transformed by my ideas back in the “What
would
change”
series
of posts (written the week that the book in which
I make this argument was released), and certainly I would still emphasize such
broad topics (language, mixture, the melting pot, and a phrase like
“All-American”) in response to your hypothetical analytical query. But within
that book, each main chapter focused on a particular century in American
post-contact history and culture, and along those lines I would also argue that
a definition of American identity and diversity focused on cross-cultural
transformation would allow—in fact require—us to rethink some of our dominant
images (both positive and negative) of different time periods.
When it comes to the arrival and
contact period, for example, for a long time our national narratives of the
first European arrivals to the Americas have focused on two distinct, in many
ways opposed, but each in their own way oversimplifying stories. Some of the
most defining national narratives have of course focused on the Puritans, and
most especially on the Mayflower Pilgrims; those narratives have tended to be
largely positive and celebratory, as exemplified by the recurring “city on a
hill” imagery which leaders like John F. Kennedy
and Ronald Reagan have
used both to describe the Pilgrims and to carry forward their idealizing
visions of their mission and community. In the dominant Pilgrim narrative,
Native Americans tend to figure mostly just as friendly helpers (a
la Squanto) who help the Pilgrims survive and then, well, more or less
vanish from the story. On the other hand, another defining national narrative
emphasizes Christopher Columbus and 1492 as key origin points; for at least the
last few decades, driven by multicultural historical revisions and the rise of
disciplines like ethnic and Native American studies, that narrative has tended
to be largely negative and critical, as illustrated by the many protests
that met the 1992 Columbus quincentenary and sought to turn the conversations
both to the many cultures that constituted the Pre-Columbian Americas and to
the often horrifically violent and destructive
aftermaths of Columbus’s “discovery” for those cultures.
There’s certainly both historical
accuracy and contemporary relevance to the positive and the negative narratives
of European arrival, but my definition requires a different vision: one that
emphasizes not arrival itself, not the cultures doing the arriving, and not
those already here and affected by the arrivals, but instead the relationships
and interconnections between and ultimately mutual transformations of all of
those cultures. And to that end, I can’t recommend highly enough Cynthia Van
Zandt’s Brothers Among Nations: The Pursuit of
Intercultural Alliances in Early America, 1580-1660. Van Zandt’s book
is exemplary as historical scholarship, utilizing archival primary sources in
consistently clear and complex ways, and refusing to settle for anything less
than a fully rounded analysis of the multiple cultures and moments and
encounters on which she focuses. But it’s just as exemplary, to my mind, in its
fundamental purpose, in Van Zandt’s desire to examine aspects of the arrival
era that are centrally defined neither by European success nor by cultural
oppression or violence; instead, she argues convincingly throughout, many of
this period’s central interactions were hesitant, tentative, partial, and most
significantly cross-cultural in every sense. If they did not always extend into
the remainder of the 17th and 18th centuries, that does
not mean that they are not crucially defining American interactions, both
because future cultures and communities would likely not have existed without
them and because, through a more 21st century lens, they provide
inspiring evidence that separation, hierarchy, and violence were far from the
only options available to early American cultures.
Special post
this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other early American histories you’d highlight?
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