Authentic Indians: Episodes of Encounter from the Late-Nineteenth-Century Northwest Coast

Authentic Indians: Episodes of Encounter from the Late-Nineteenth-Century Northwest Coast

by Paige Raibmon
Authentic Indians: Episodes of Encounter from the Late-Nineteenth-Century Northwest Coast

Authentic Indians: Episodes of Encounter from the Late-Nineteenth-Century Northwest Coast

by Paige Raibmon

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Overview

In this innovative history, Paige Raibmon examines the political ramifications of ideas about “real Indians.” Focusing on the Northwest Coast in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth, she describes how government officials, missionaries, anthropologists, reformers, settlers, and tourists developed definitions of Indian authenticity based on such binaries as Indian versus White, traditional versus modern, and uncivilized versus civilized. They recognized as authentic only those expressions of “Indianness” that conformed to their limited definitions and reflected their sense of colonial legitimacy and racial superiority. Raibmon shows that Whites and Aboriginals were collaborators—albeit unequal ones—in the politics of authenticity. Non-Aboriginal people employed definitions of Indian culture that limited Aboriginal claims to resources, land, and sovereignty, while Aboriginals utilized those same definitions to access the social, political, and economic means necessary for their survival under colonialism.

Drawing on research in newspapers, magazines, agency and missionary records, memoirs, and diaries, Raibmon combines cultural and labor history. She looks at three historical episodes: the participation of a group of Kwakwaka’wakw from Vancouver in the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago; the work of migrant Aboriginal laborers in the hop fields of Puget Sound; and the legal efforts of Tlingit artist Rudolph Walton to have his mixed-race step-children admitted to the white public school in Sitka, Alaska. Together these episodes reveal the consequences of outsiders’ attempts to define authentic Aboriginal culture. Raibmon argues that Aboriginal culture is much more than the reproduction of rituals; it also lies in the means by which Aboriginal people generate new and meaningful ways of identifying their place in a changing modern environment.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822386773
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 07/21/2005
Series: a John Hope Franklin Center Book
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Paige Raibmon is Assistant Professor of History at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations xi

Acknowledgments xiii

Introduction: Authenticity and Colonial Cosmology 1

1. Local Politics and Colonial Relations: The Kwakwaka'wakw at Home on the Northwest Coast 15

2. "The March of the Aborigine to Civilization": Live Exhibits and the World's Columbian Exhibition, 1893 34

3. Theaters of Contact: The Kwakwaka'wakh at the Fair 50

4. Picking, Posing, and Performing: Puget Sound Hop Fields and Income for Aboriginal Workers 74

5. Harvest Gatherings: Aboriginal Agendas, Economy, and Culture 98

6. Indian Watchers: Colonial Imagination and Colonial Reality 116

7. The Inside Passage to Authenticity: Sitka Tourism and the Tlingit 135

8. "The Trend is Upward": Mission and Cottage Life 157

9. Civilization on Trial: The Davis Case 175

Conclusion: Authenticity's Call 198

List of Abbreviations 209

Notes 211

Bibliography 261

Index 295

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