1. 'Strangers on their own land'1: Ideology, Policy, and Rational Landscapes in the United States, 1825-1934.
- Author
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Winlow, Heather
- Subjects
- *
NATIVE Americans , *IDEOLOGY , *GOVERNMENT policy , *TRIBES , *CARTOGRAPHY , *TWENTIETH century , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Native Americans were increasingly excluded from the American social body and from national space. This article explores that exclusion from three perspectives: through dominant national ideologies that represented tribal groups as 'Other' and inferior to European Americans; through federal policies - including removal, reservation, and allotment - that increasingly confined 'Indians' to specific parts of the national landscape; and through the cartographic delineation of the national territory, which produced a Cartesian gridded landscape alien to Native understandings of land. This latter focus includes a case study of Indian Territory, which was incorporated into the state of Oklahoma in 1907. These three strands are explored through a theoretical framework that combines ideas about governmentality and territory, discourses of otherness and exclusion, and the power of maps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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