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ID154911
Title ProperTocqueville in Jacksonian context
Other Title InformationAmerican expansionism and discourses of American Indian nomadism in democracy in America
LanguageENG
AuthorHendrix, Burke A
Summary / Abstract (Note)Tocqueville’s discussion of American Indians in Democracy in America is often read as the paradigmatic expression of a conventional story about American political expansion. This narrative holds that westward expansion was easy, in part because American Indians did not offer much resistance. Historians of political thought and scholars of American Political Development tend to affirm this narrative when they read Tocqueville’s text as suggesting merely that Indians are “doomed” to an inevitable extinction. Our interpretation here proceeds along different lines, with a greater focus on the ways in which contending Jacksonian-era discourses of Indian nomadism are represented in Tocqueville’s text. We argue that Democracy reflects complex and often competing descriptions of inherent Indian nomadism, retreat, and removal, with varying attributions of causal responsibility for disappearing Indian populations. This reading of Tocqueville highlights contentions about Indian removal that are often ignored or neglected in current scholarship, and can therefore help us to better appreciate both his text and his time.
`In' analytical NotePerspectives on Politics Vol.15, No.3; Sep 2017: p.663-677
Journal SourcePerspectives on Politics 2017-09 15, 3
Key WordsTocqueville in Jacksonian Context ;  American Expansionism ;  Discourses of American Indian Nomadism ;  Democracy in America