[For this year’s
installment in my annual
series of holiday
wishes for those mischievous AmericanStudies
Elves, I’ll be expressing wishes for figures from American history whom we
should better remember. Share your nominees in comments and happy holidays!]
On two of the
many reasons why we should better remember the fiery preacher.
As with most of
the figures I’ll highlight this week, I’ve written a number of prior posts on
or featuring William Apess. So for each figure, I’ll dedicate the first
paragraph to highlighting
a few of those posts (and asking you to check
them out if you would), so as not to repeat myself in this new one!
Welcome back!
Those prior posts certainly reflect many of the reasons why we should better
remember Apess, which could be boiled down to: he was a genuinely unique badass
who connects to equally badass Early Republic histories and communities. But
better remembering Apess would also help Americans challenge a narrative that
remains frustratingly influential in 2019: the “vanishing
American” narrative that positions Native Americans as part of our history rather
than part of our present. You might think that prominent 21st
century indigenous communities like the Standing
Rock protesters would make it impossible not to recognize Native Americans
as part of our contemporary society, but to my mind our national narratives
continue to leave out Native Americans far more often than they include them. Few
American voices have ever challenged that frustratingly persistent trend more
potently and successfully than William Apess did.
As I wrote
in this post, Apess also offers one of our clearest and most impressive
models of a subject I’ve been thinking
a lot about in recent years and will continue to in my next book project:
critical patriotism. Without spoiling everything I’ll try to trace and argue in
that project, I would note that our collective narratives likewise remain
consistently, frustratingly bad (just ask Colin
Kaepernick if ye doubt the claim) at challenging the assumption that
patriotism and criticism are two different ways to engage with the nation. One
way to change that trend is to better remember the many figures throughout our
history who have exemplified a critically patriotic perspective, one summed up
nicely by the final lines of Apess’ “An Indian’s
Looking-Glass for the White Man”: “Do not get tired, ye
noble-hearted—only think how many poor Indians want their wounds done up daily;
the Lord will reward you, and pray you stop not till this tree of distinction
shall be leveled to the earth, and the mantle of prejudice torn from every
American heart—then shall peace pervade the Union.” May we better remember that
lesson, and the voice who offered it, Elves!
Next wish
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Figures (or
stories, histories, texts, etc.) you wish we’d better remember?
No comments:
Post a Comment