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ID113784
Title ProperOff the map, beneath our feet
Other Title Informationcartographic amnesia and the national body
LanguageENG
AuthorRosen-Carole, Adam
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The imaginary consolidation of America as a sovereign nation-state situated on a state-centric international topography was and remains predicated on spatializing practices bound up with the ongoing eradication of indigenous people(s) and simultaneous effacement, or at least repression, of the violence of the (neo)colonial encounter. The American nation-state is founded on the all-but-forgotten bodies and worlds of indigenous peoples and is continually secured by a narrative constellation that reduces the decimation of people(s) to a clearing of space on which a sovereign nation could be constructed or within which it could evolve. This article will trace the various techniques of decimating indigenous cultures and bodies that facilitate efforts of nationalist historiography that reduce indigenous cartographies to mere space situated within a narrative trajectory of American national unification.
`In' analytical NoteAlternatives Vol. 37, No.2; May 2012: p.133-150
Journal SourceAlternatives Vol. 37, No.2; May 2012: p.133-150
Key WordsCartography ;  Topology ;  Indigeneity ;  Historiography ;  Narrative ;  America


 
 
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