The thesis on which I have based my research proposes that while the
European perception of the Native American from 1750 to 1850 came to be
mediated via all the visual arts, it was specifically via the graphic
media that the proliferation of imagery concerning the Native American
developed certain iconic and representational conventions and that these
consistently overwhelmed other sources of information, from experience
to written interpretation. The ubiquity of certain modes of
presentation, of figure-types, and of synecdoches which stood for the
Native American (e.g. feather decoration or the tomahawk) resulted
almost entirely from graphic methods of visual elucidation. The tyranny
of such visual types lies not only in their effective re-constitution of
known, familiar imagery but also in the qualitative characterization of
the Native American figure. In their reduction of the figure to
symbolic and emblematic patterns of content, these few visual tokens
belied the greater, complex reality of Native American existence, and
left the European perception of it in a static position. It is only
through the collation and analysis of all the various modes of visual
expression, both graphic and ‘high’ art instances, that these tokens of
the visual representation of the Native American can be discerned and
their proliferation be analysed as a determinant in the ‘construction’
of the Native American.
Date of Award | 1989 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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The European Perception of the Native American, 1750 - 1850
Pratt, S. R. (Author). 1989
Student thesis: PhD