Nora Haenggi 26 April 2012 Romantic
Dehumanization
American history is a subject often seen as a romanticized
narrative for the American public. Over time that romance becomes elevated and
mythologized. Images of historical figures and groups in America’s history
frequently become spirited away to anecdotal fables, allegories, and legends.
Americans love fables and imaginative narration. However, fact and fiction are
easily and often blended and many Americans are often left to wonder which text
is history and which text is fantasy. A final class assignment—reading
romantic poetry—brought
me to this topic. While reading The
Indian Burying Ground by Philip Freneau and
A Narrative of the Captivity and
Restoration by Mary Rowlandson, I am reminded of studying additional texts
about the Native American at the
beginning of the semester as well as Native American research for another class.
I decided to look further in order to determine whether or not this was
consistent since I suspected a pattern in American depiction of the American
Native. I recalled hearing of ancient Greek philosophers romanticizing the
primitive societies, as well as the Sumerian Enkidu, gentleman of nature, from
the Epic of Gilgamesh. I was curious
if the duplicitous trope of the mythologized savage was perpetuated further in
early American literature. What literature I found on the American Native, from
the colonization, enlightenment, and romanticism literary periods, is highly
romanticized and dualistic to the point of dehumanization.
During my research I found that during the colonization
period of America, the settlers viewed American land and its native inhabitants
like a garden, waiting to be tamed and cultivated for the European
sensibilities. Within our own class text we studied Captain John Smith, in the
Generall Historie of Virginia (1624)
in which he presents his own
dualistic view of the Natives. He describes larger than life characters when he
illustrates the Native’s violent approach to his settlement, “the savages would
assault them” (para 6). He continues to speak of the Natives as if they were
non-human. To Smith, the Natives were simply “barbarians” (paragraph 10).
Further reading reveals Smith’s feelings about the Natives' President as later
in his text he depicts a fearful sight when the Natives’ Chief approaches
Smith’s settlement, “Powhatan, more like a devil than a man…as black as himself”
(para. 15). However, the daughter of this described devil man, Smith considers
the daughter, Pocahontas, as being the “dearest” while describing and
elaborating his romanticized tale of the Chief’s young daughter saving him from
death by the hands of her tribe, twice. Pocahontas was elevated through speech
as a God-sent being, separate from the barbarous savages, and yet still not on
the same plane as the colonists. It is almost as if Smith views her as a
guardian angel. Smith was not the only colonist to elaborate on the fearsome
Natives.
Another classroom text,
Narrative of the Captivity and
Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson (1682), reveals Mrs. Mary Rowlandson
also dehumanizes the Native American in her captivity narrative through the use
of realism, gothic, and romantic elements. Her settlement was under attack by
the Natives, but not once does she refer to them as people. She refers to the
Natives as “wretches”, “heathen”, “barbarous” (.1a, .2d, 1.1, 1.1e, 1.2).
Reducing the Natives to demonic, in a later paragraph she depicts the attackers
as “hell-hounds … roaring and ranting” (.3d). In pure gothic form she further
illustrates the Native as demonic “savages”, “black creatures in the night,
which made the place a lively resemblance of hell”, and “as black as the devil”
(1.1a, 1.1e, 19.3h). Mrs. Rowlandson witnessed her house burn down and her
children taken in her captivity story. There was little personification of her
captors in her story, she merely referred to them as “wild beasts of the forest”
(4.2). Rowlandson recalls finding that the Natives told her falsehoods about her
husband; she was more confirmed that they were evil, these barbarous creatures
to him who was a liar from the beginning” (13.1b). The one time she manages to
refer to the Indians as men she calls them “unstable madmen” (19.3a). There was
no duality for the Native Americans with Mrs. Rowlandson. No, of the Native
Americans humanity, Mrs. Rowlandson would never be convinced or enlightened
otherwise. Perhaps there is some
humanity for the Native American during the Enlightenment period. Thomas
Jefferson was using Enlightenment language to describe the Natives as having
their own “civilization”, and in a letter he wrote to a Marquis he proclaimed
the Natives to be equal in mind and body to those of the Europeans
(Monticello.com). Jefferson appears to practice the idea of tri-identity for
these Natives as he would speak in reminiscence and in admiration of the Natives
he did know personally. The Native seemed, to Jefferson, to be the ally, the
enemy, and the subject all at once. However it is published that he spoke highly
of an elder in a letter he wrote to John Adams, The moon was in full
splendor...His sounding voice, distinct articulation, animated action, and the
solemn silence of his people at their several fires, filled me with awe and
veneration, altho' I did not understand a word he uttered
As a
child he was fond of the Natives and romanticized them in his memory as an
adult. Another college website reveals that Jefferson also had an idea of dual
identity for the Native American when he purchased the Louisiana territory he
spoke and acted differently about his goals and relationships with the Native
American tribes, is to live in perpetual
peace with the Indians, to cultivate their affectionate attachment from them, by
everything just and liberal which we can do for them within the bounds of
reason." Jefferson then provides
Harrison with precise instructions how to get rid of every last independent
tribe between the Atlantic states and the Mississippi.
Another author of the enlightenment, William Bartram
appeared to take great pains to scientifically research the North American
Native. His writings, William Bartram on
the Southeastern Indians were an extensive effort in advisement of Native
American policy. He felt the narrative of the “savage” Native that was being
sent to Europe was offensive to himself and other colonists (208). He focused on
Native agricultural practice and food preparation, gender roles, manufactures,
town organization, government, art and architecture, origins and the institution
of slavery amongst the Natives. The book is mostly a description of Bartram’s
findings- very factual and informative, and apparently historically accurate –
what I would imagine to be an important anthropological text. However, a hint of
the romance language comes through when Bartram describes the North American
Native chief as, …a tall, well-made man,
affable and cheerful, with eyes lively and full of fir, his countenance manly
and placid, yet ferocious, or what we call savage; …his head trimmed and
ornamented in true Creek fashion. (51)
Authors of the literary romantic era wanted a break from
the stuffy reason of the Enlightenment. They saw Native Americans being forced
from their land, and they saw filthy barges towing other filthy ships across
lakes and rivers. The Romance authors wanted adventure and individualism; some
wanted a return to nature and pastoral life; some wanted a return to religious
zeal. I decided I would try recommendeds text of the romantic era to see if
there was humanizing of the Native American.
Romantic period Daniel Defoe writes of the South
American Indian as a savage in Robinson
Crusoe (1719). Defoe’s Crusoe was able to borrow survival skills from the
Natives in order to survive the South American landscape. However, that is as
far as his complimentary tale for the indigenous population will take the
reader. The rest of the narrative reveals the Natives to be considered by this
adventurist as rather animalistic. They are “lusty” creatures he must contend
with equated with the beasts on the island, he writes (89). He is convinced they
are cannibalistic (170), and on each excursion he makes preparations to avoid
the savages or contend with them like animals (138, 194). Defoe in his adventure
novel about Robinson Crusoe’s uses the language of the storyline to dehumanize
the Native population of South America. Savages gave him nightmares, dread and
terror (246, 256). For Defoe’s adventure, Crusoe was resigned to perceiving the
Native population as nothing more than wretched savages, devouring one another
(262). Further reading revealed repeated dehumanizing of the Native when he
describes that he made at least one savage his servant and plotted to capture
others for his possession (313). Defoe seems not to be the sort of romantic
author one might research when looking for a noble savage or a humanized Native.
Finding a humanized Native proves to be a difficult task. So, next I researched
a poet of the romantic era.
From the course website, a poem
The Indian Burying Ground, written by
author Philip Freneau is one of the first poems to romanticize and idealize the
American Native. Freneau wrote both Enlightenment text and Romantic era text.
Further reading of the poem reveals elevated language for the Native American.
The language is mythological, dreamy and romantic using words to describe the
Natives such as, “timorous and painted”; their possessions are described as
“fancies” with “shadows and delusions”. Supernatural phenomena in the poem also
create a gothic feeling to the romantic poem. The poem, about death, encourages
the reader to understand strength and beauty from death. This is considered to
be highly romanticized of the Native American because the European saw death as
something to be feared and avoided. This makes the Native American more
different, but inviting and warm, yet still other-worldly and mythological,
“…the ancients of these lands – The Indian when from life released…Here, still a
lofty rock remains…The children of the forest played.”
It seems the early American literary world is torn
and the Native American has little identity but that of a brutish demonic savage
or the noble savage. Identities now are mythologized and romanticized to a point
of dehumanization. Dig deep enough and through the rubble of the Native identity
there is some salvaged dignity from the science of the Enlightenment. Perhaps
and hopefully the Native Americans can launch a Renaissance and Enlightenment of
their own and enlighten the rest of the West. Works Cited
Bartram, William.
William Batram and the Southeastern Indians.Ed. Gregory A. Waselkov and
Kathryn E. Holland Braund. University of Nebraska, 1995. Print.
Chew, Elizabeth V. "Thomas Jefferson's Monticello." Thomas
Jefferson's Monticello. Dec. 2002. Web. 27 Apr. 2012. <http://www.monticello.org/>
|