Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Pg. 99: Steven Conn's "History's Shadow"

The current feature at the Page 99 Test: Steven Conn's History's Shadow: Native Americans and Historical Consciousness in the Nineteenth Century.

About the book, from the publisher:
Who were the Native Americans? Where did they come from and how long ago? Did they have a history, and would they have a future? Questions such as these dominated intellectual life in the United States during the nineteenth century. And for many Americans, such questions about the original inhabitants of their homeland inspired a flurry of historical investigation, scientific inquiry, and heated political debate.

History's Shadow traces the struggle of Americans trying to understand the people who originally occupied the continent claimed as their own. Steven Conn considers how the question of the Indian compelled Americans to abandon older explanatory frameworks for sovereignty like the Bible and classical literature and instead develop new ones. Through their engagement with Native American language and culture, American intellectuals helped shape and define the emerging fields of archaeology, ethnology, linguistics, and art. But more important, the questions posed by the presence of the Indian in the United States forced Americans to confront the meaning of history itself, both that of Native Americans and their own: how it should be studied, what drove its processes, and where it might ultimately lead. The encounter with Native Americans, Conn argues, helped give rise to a distinctly American historical consciousness.

A work of enormous scope and intellect, History's Shadow will speak to anyone interested in Native Americans and their profound influence on our cultural imagination.
Among the reviews of History's Shadow:
History’s Shadow is an intelligent and comprehensive look at the place of Native Americans in Euro-American’s intellectual history.... Examining literature, painting, photography, ethnology, and anthropology, Conn mines the written record to discover how non-Native Americans thought about Indians.”
—Joy S. Kasson, Los Angeles Times
Steven Conn is Professor and Director of the Public History Program at The Ohio State University's Department of History. His other books include Museums and American Intellectual Life, 1876-1926, Metropolitan Philadelphia: Living in the Presence of the Past, and, with Max Page, an anthology of writings on America's built environment entitled Building the Nation.

The Page 99 Test: History's Shadow.

--Marshal Zeringue