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Staging Indigeneity Salvage Tourism And The Performance Of Native American History Katrina Phillips

  • SKU: BELL-46708392
Staging Indigeneity Salvage Tourism And The Performance Of Native American History Katrina Phillips
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Staging Indigeneity Salvage Tourism And The Performance Of Native American History Katrina Phillips instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 15.56 MB
Pages: 262
Author: Katrina Phillips
ISBN: 9781469662329, 9781469662305, 9781469662312, 9782020038256, 2020038250, 1469662329, 1469662302, 1469662310
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Staging Indigeneity Salvage Tourism And The Performance Of Native American History Katrina Phillips by Katrina Phillips 9781469662329, 9781469662305, 9781469662312, 9782020038256, 2020038250, 1469662329, 1469662302, 1469662310 instant download after payment.

As tourists increasingly moved across the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a surprising number of communities looked to capitalize on the histories of Native American people to create tourist attractions. From the Happy Canyon Indian Pageant and Wild West Show in Pendleton, Oregon, to outdoor dramas like Tecumseh! in Chillicothe, Ohio, and Unto These Hills in Cherokee, North Carolina, locals staged performances that claimed to honor an Indigenous past while depicting that past on white settlers' terms. Linking the origins of these performances to their present-day incarnations, this incisive book reveals how they constituted what Katrina Phillips calls "salvage tourism"—a set of practices paralleling so-called salvage ethnography, which documented the histories, languages, and cultures of Indigenous people while reinforcing a belief that Native American societies were inevitably disappearing. Across time, Phillips argues, tourism, nostalgia, and authenticity converge in the creation of salvage tourism, which blends tourism and history, contestations over citizenship, identity, belonging, and the continued use of Indians and Indianness as a means of escape, entertainment, and economic development.

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