Javascript must be enabled to continue!
“Obvious Indian”—missionaries, Anthropologists, and the “Wild Indians” Of Cuba: Representations of the Amerindian Presence in Cuba
View through CrossRef
This article examines Amerindian identity and the trope of extinction through the prism of anthropological and other representations of indigenous peoples, with a particular focus on observations of peoples labeled as “Indian” or “aboriginal” in Cuba during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. By the nineteenth century, indigenous peoples assumed a privileged position as subjects of scientific study, but as peoples undergoing or having undergone biological and cultural decline, if not disappearance, especially in Cuba, where indigenous Taíno were (are) considered long extinct. This diminution was facilitated by anthropological paradigms, historiography, and the ideology of race. Though indigenous studies have recently advanced toward a richer, more complex and nuanced understanding of these issues, necessarily facilitated by indigenous participants, holdovers from the old theories of blood quantum and cultural essentialism endure. Paradoxically, however, representations of indigenous peoples based in these persistent paradigms, however obsolete, provide important evidence for the persistence of indigenous peoples and communities in places like Cuba.
Title: “Obvious Indian”—missionaries, Anthropologists, and the “Wild Indians” Of Cuba: Representations of the Amerindian Presence in Cuba
Description:
This article examines Amerindian identity and the trope of extinction through the prism of anthropological and other representations of indigenous peoples, with a particular focus on observations of peoples labeled as “Indian” or “aboriginal” in Cuba during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
By the nineteenth century, indigenous peoples assumed a privileged position as subjects of scientific study, but as peoples undergoing or having undergone biological and cultural decline, if not disappearance, especially in Cuba, where indigenous Taíno were (are) considered long extinct.
This diminution was facilitated by anthropological paradigms, historiography, and the ideology of race.
Though indigenous studies have recently advanced toward a richer, more complex and nuanced understanding of these issues, necessarily facilitated by indigenous participants, holdovers from the old theories of blood quantum and cultural essentialism endure.
Paradoxically, however, representations of indigenous peoples based in these persistent paradigms, however obsolete, provide important evidence for the persistence of indigenous peoples and communities in places like Cuba.
Related Results
THE CAPITÃES MORES OF THE JAPAN VOYAGE: A GROUP PORTRAIT
THE CAPITÃES MORES OF THE JAPAN VOYAGE: A GROUP PORTRAIT
Starting from the premise that all empire building involves ideological constructs justifying the violence that accompanies such efforts, this article concentrates on elucidating t...
‘White Already to Harvest’: South Australian Women Missionaries in India1
‘White Already to Harvest’: South Australian Women Missionaries in India1
In 1882, the South Australian Baptist Missionary Society sent off its first missionaries to Faridpur in East Bengal. Miss Marie Gilbert and Miss Ellen Arnold were the first of a st...
Wild Prometheus: A Strategic Primitivism and the Question Concerning Technology
Wild Prometheus: A Strategic Primitivism and the Question Concerning Technology
The article is devoted to the elaboration of conceptual trajectories of strategic primitivism against the background of today’s projects of undermining capital by acceleration (acc...
Ibsen's Wild Duck
Ibsen's Wild Duck
WHEN IBSEN MAILED THE MANUSCRIPT OF The Wild Duck to his publisher in September 1884, he noted in his covering letter that the method of the new play gave it a place apart in his w...
Website: 'German Missionaries in Queensland'
Website: 'German Missionaries in Queensland'
German Missionaries in Queensland (hosted by Griffith University website at http://missionaries.griffith.edu.au)...
Buses in Bongoland
Buses in Bongoland
It is now common for anthropologists to argue that the occult is adequately explained as an oblique, metaphysical critique of the now, the new, the neoliberal. Indeed, such underst...
ANTROPOLOGIENS POTENS I ALER ETTER DEN PRIMITIVES DØD
ANTROPOLOGIENS POTENS I ALER ETTER DEN PRIMITIVES DØD
Thomas Hylland Eriksen: Anthropology
and the Death of the Primitive
Although anthropologists for generations
have studied complex societies, the
disciplinar...
Da Revolução Cubana à Era Obama: das tensões à normalização
Da Revolução Cubana à Era Obama: das tensões à normalização
Desde a Revolução de 1959, as relações dos Estados Unidos com Cuba entraram em uma era de antagonismo e tensões políticas. Após quase meio século de uma proximidade íntima, os dois...