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    Before American History

    Nationalist Mythmaking and Indigenous Dispossession

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    Author(s)
    Mucher, Christen
    Collection
    Sustainable History Monograph Pilot (SHMP); Sustainable History Monograph Pilot (SHMP)
    Language
    English
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Before American History juxtaposes Mexico City’s famous carved Sun Stone with the mounded earthworks found throughout the Midwestern states of the U.S. to examine the project of settler nationalism from the 1780s to the 1840s in two North American republics usually studied separately. As the U.S. and Mexico transformed from European colonies into independent nations—and before war scarred them both—antiquarians and historians compiled and interpreted archives meant to document America’s Indigenous pasts. These settler-colonial understandings of North America’s past deliberately misappropriated Indigenous histories and repurposed them and their material objects as "American antiquities," thereby writing Indigenous pasts out of U.S. and Mexican national histories and national lands and erasing and denigrating Native peoples living in both nascent republics.Christen Mucher creatively recovers the Sun Stone and mounded earthworks as archives of nationalist power and Indigenous dispossession as well as objects that are, at their material base, produced by Indigenous people but settler controlled and settler interpreted. Her approach renders visible the foundational methodologies, materials, and mythologies that created an American history out of and on top of Indigenous worlds and facilitated Native dispossession continent-wide. By writing Indigenous actors out of national histories, Mexican and U.S. elites also wrote them out of their lands, a legacy of erasure and removal that continues when we repeat these eighteenth- and nineteenth-century settler narratives and that reverberates in discussions of immigration, migration, and Nativism today.
    URI
    https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/57391
    Keywords
    settler colonialism;nationalism;antiquarianism;Indigenous dispossession;Sun Stone;New Spain;Mexico;earthworks;mound builders;Cahokia;Aztecas;Nahua;creole intellectuals;Lorenzo Benaduci;Francisco Clavijero;Thomas Jefferson;Benjamin Smith Barton;Caleb Atwater
    DOI
    10.52156/m.5619
    ISBN
    9780813948249, 9780813948256, 9780813948263, 9780813948263
    Publisher
    University of Virginia Press
    Publication date and place
    Charlottesville, 2022
    Grantor
    • Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
    Series
    Writing the Early Americas,
    Pages
    344
    Rights
    https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
    • Imported or submitted locally

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    License

    • If not noted otherwise all contents are available under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

    Credits

    • logo EU
    • This project received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 683680, 810640, 871069 and 964352.

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