"This book is situated within the terrain of intense debate over the placement and displacement of monuments to difficult histories. Installed in Plymouth in 1921 to commemorate the Tercentenary of the landing of the Pilgrims, Cyrus Dallin's statue Massasoit was intended to memorialize the Pokanoket Massasoit (leader) 8sâmeeqan as a welcoming diplomat and participant in the mythical first Thanksgiving. But Massasoit did not remain only in Plymouth. Lisa Blee and Jean O'Brien track the physical and narrative mobility of Massasoit through its inception and its movement to numerous locations in the US to illuminate how Massasoit's attachment to national origins did and did not move with the installations. The historical memory surrounding Massasoit suggests both the rich potential of Indigenous public historians to intervene in sanitized national narratives of origins, and the ways in which this history is commodified. Can Massasoit prompt viewers to reckon with ... the structural violence of settler colonialism in commemorative landscapes, or does it further entrench celebratory narratives of national origins?"--
Author(s): Lisa Blee; Jean M. O'Brien
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 288
-000_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - Front Matter
000_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - Table of Contents
001_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - PROLOGUE
007_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - INTRODUCTION
031_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - CASTING
064_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - STAGING
116_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - DISTANCING
161_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - MARKETING
202_Epilogue
215_Afterword
219_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - Notes
253_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - Bibliography
265_Blee and O’Brien - 2019 - Index