Colonizing the Past: Mythmaking and Pre-Columbian Whites in Nineteenth-Century American Writing

Edward Watts

Colonizing the Past: Mythmaking and Pre-Columbian Whites in Nineteenth-Century American Writing
Format
Paperback
Publisher
University of Virginia Press
Country
United States
Published
14 February 2020
Pages
296
ISBN
9780813943879

Colonizing the Past: Mythmaking and Pre-Columbian Whites in Nineteenth-Century American Writing

Edward Watts

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After the Revolution, Americans realized they lacked the common, deep, or meaningful history that might bind together their loose confederation of former colonies into a genuine nation. They had been conquerors yet colonials, now politically independent yet culturally subordinate to European history and traditions. To resolve these paradoxes, some early republic historians went so far as to reconstruct pre-Columbian, transatlantic adventures by white people that might be employed to assert their rights and ennoble their identities as Americans.In Colonizing the Past, Edward Watts labels this impulse primordialism and reveals its consistent presence over the span of nineteenth-century American print culture in writers ranging from Washington Irving to Mark Twain. In dozens of texts, Watts tracks episodes in which varying accounts of pre-Columbian whites attracted widespread attention: the Welsh Indians, the Lost Tribes of Israel, the white Mound Builders, and the Vikings, as well as two ancient Irish interventions. In each instance, public interest was ignited when representations of the group in question became enmeshed in concurrent conversations about the nation’s evolving identity and policies. Yet at every turn, counternarratives and public resistance challenged both the plausibility of the pre-Columbian whites and the colonialist symbolism that had been evoked to create a sense of American identity. By challenging the rhetoric of primordialism and empire building, dissenting writers exposed the crimes of conquest and white Americans’ marginality as ex-colonials.

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