Thesis ID: CBB845920115

A Science of Literature: Ethnology and the Collection of Indigenous Oral Traditions in the United States (2022)

unapi

In A Science of Literature, I examine how and why US ethnologists and popular authors of the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries collected, read, and interpreted Indigenous oral traditions as works of literature. “Oral traditions” in this case refers to the narratives and songs that Indigenous peoples maintained mostly orally, and which variously served religious, historical, philosophical, educational, and entertainment purposes within Indigenous communities. I track how, through the collection process, Euro-American authors transformed oral traditions into “Indian oral literature,” (re)writing versions of oral traditions that aligned with Western literary categories and attitudes toward the “primitive.” For the most part, this reconceptualization, I argue, worked to discredit oral traditions as bodies of knowledge—as works of fiction and poetry, oral traditions became, in effect, untrue—and it supported removal and assimilation efforts in so far as it was used to shed light on a primitive Indian psychology, one that was naturally poetic, but not rational, not scientific. And yet many Indigenous writers, like George Copway and Zitkala-Ša, took advantage of the popularity of Indian oral literature to produce their own print collections of oral traditions. I analyze these collections as works of Indigenous “counter science.” I show how Indigenous writers, for example, moved from informant to ethnologist as they cited, summarized, and transcribed oral traditions as tribal records (histories, maps, deeds) and later as works of moral philosophy, thus explicitly contesting their interpretation as merely works of the imagination. Oral traditions, as I argue, have functioned as important resources to which Indigenous and non-Indigenous writers alike turned to validate scientific and literary practices, to contest the history of colonization, and to debate US-Indian relations.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB845920115/

Similar Citations

Article Duane W. Hamacher; (2020)
Native American traditions of Meteor Crater, Arizona: fact, fiction or appropriation? (/isis/citation/CBB247677821/)

Thesis Christopher Steven Kindell; (2019)
The Sanitary Sieve: Public Health, Infectious Diseases, and the Urbanization of Honolulu, c. 1850–1914 (/isis/citation/CBB673158334/)

Book John Ryan Fischer; (2017)
Cattle Colonialism: An Environmental History of the Conquest of California and Hawai'i (/isis/citation/CBB872040578/)

Book Sarah Ann Pinto; (2018)
Lunatic Asylums in Colonial Bombay: Shackled Bodies, Unchained Minds (/isis/citation/CBB126077328/)

Article Mohd Ashraf Wani; Rouf Ahmad Bhat; (2022)
Colonial masculinity and indigenous śikārī: a history of sport-hunting in Kashmir during Dogra rule (/isis/citation/CBB704971209/)

Book Melissa N. Stein; (2015)
Measuring Manhood: Race and the Science of Masculinity, 1830-1934 (/isis/citation/CBB729336001/)

Article Clapperton, Jonathan; (2013)
Naturalizing Race Relations: Conservation, Colonialism, and Spectacle at the Banff Indian Days (/isis/citation/CBB001550532/)

Thesis Peng, Rong-Bang; (2012)
Decolonizing Psychic Space: Remembering the Indigenous Psychology Movement in Taiwan (/isis/citation/CBB001567365/)

Book Frederic W. Gleach; Regna Darnell; (2016)
Local Knowledge, Global Stage (/isis/citation/CBB713344644/)

Thesis Pinkoski, Marc; (2007)
Julian Steward and American Anthropology: The Science of Colonialism (/isis/citation/CBB001561518/)

Authors & Contributors
Seitz, John Britton
Briones, Matthew
Dana Luciano
Ashraf Wani, Mohd
Pinto, Sarah Ann
Bhat, Rouf Ahmad
Journals
History and Anthropology
Museum History Journal
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage
Indian Journal of History of Science
Canadian Historical Review
Publishers
The University of North Carolina Press
The University of Chicago Press
University of Victoria (Canada)
Iowa State University
Duquesne University
University of New Mexico Press
Concepts
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
Colonialism
Ethnology
Cultural anthropology
Cross-cultural interaction; cultural influence
American Indians; Native Americans; First Nations of the Americas
People
Boas, Franz
Golla, Susan
Hartland, Edwin Sidney
White, Walter
Steward, Julian
Skinner, Henry Devenish
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century
18th century
Places
United States
Russia
Canada
Honolulu (Hawaii)
Bombay (India)
Alberta, Canada
Institutions
American Museum of Natural History, New York
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment