Captive Minds
New Worlds and Old Metaphors
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7557/13.2153Keywords:
Cultural studies, American frontier, National identities, Native Americans, Collective memory, Nineteenth century American historyAbstract
The following essay discusses the politics of naming Native Americans at the end of the nineteenth century. At the time of the Wounded Knee massacre and the official "close" of the American geographical frontier, American mainstream identity had lost its earlier clarity. The attention to historical contextualization in particular suggests some of the ways in which the process of naming relates to the larger contested practice of shaping American national and cultural identities.