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"Something Savage and Luxuriant": American Identity and the Indian Place-Name Literature

Article

Overview

Authors

  • Herman, R. Douglas K.

Abstract

  • The treatment of American Indian place-names provides a window into the growth of American nationalism since 1776 and attitudes towards Indians by the new settler society. Originally ignored or erased by European colonists, Indian place-names became a subject of fascination and scholarship from the late-nineteenth century, at the same time that Indians themselves were marginalized to reservations. A large body of literature produced by non-Natives sometimes frames these place names as "romantic," and other times as distinctly unromantic. In the voluminous literature on this topic, the treatment of Indians and their place-names reflects diverse and shifting attitudes towards American Indians in United States culture, as elaborated by Philip Deloria and Robert Berkhofer. Drawing on approximately 120 texts on Indian place-names, this study uses the lens of romance , a polyvalent term with various implications, to examine how non-Native writings on these toponyms reveals attitudes towards Indians themselves and their place in the American nationalist imagination.

Published In

Publication Date

  • 2015

Authors

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (doi)

Additional Document Info

Start Page

  • 25

End Page

  • 46

Volume

  • 39

Issue

  • 1