suspicions confirmed

Jul 29, 2007 22:55


I had ranted some time back about the misleadingly Romantic image of Native Indian culture that the new Smithsonian was projecting. Now the new National Geographic article on the Rise and Fall of the Mayan culture spells the internal conflicts, the over-exploitation of the environment and the Euroasian style of dealing with ones' opponents out in ( Read more... )

history, sociology, culture

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_rck_ July 31 2007, 03:41:31 UTC
Maybe I am just naive, but I would like to think that in this day and age it is simply no longer possible to tell the history of peoples without reference to their socio-economic and ecological underpinnings. I am somehow not willing to put this on par with picking sides in a representational approach; it's the difference between something that could have happened in the real world and fantasy.

The fundamental problem with ideological historical accounts is their simplicity; conspiracy theories for example work on the assumption that three people can be alive and still keep a secret (to paraphrase Ben Franklin). The purpose of a museum is to collate the bewildering complexity of artifacts that defies the simple explanations. The Smithsonian actually does that in some parts, and does it with all the skill one would expect of 21st century museum pedagogics. BUT they leave out half of the complexity.

What got me so pissed off was the portrayal of the Native Indians sitting around their villages, pondering dualities and being one with nature, and being interrupted by the stupid Europeans into a world of sickness and violence. The second part is pretty much on target, but the first is pure fantasy.

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