Jonilee’s Reviews > Playing Indian > Status Update
Jonilee
is on page 31 of 262
With the onset of outright war in 1775, the figure of the Indian appeared as not only noble and civilized, but also willful, determined, and strong. Indians appeared on military flags, newspaper mastheads, and numerous handbills. In a clear reference to the Tea Party, later printers would portray the American Congress as a colonist in Indian disguise.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:33AM
Like flag
Jonilee’s Previous Updates
Jonilee
is on page 37 of 262
The powerful and creative identity embodied and performed at the Tea Party made it clear that Americans were, in fact, something new.
It remained far easier, however, to say what Americans were not or what they might become than to articulate what they actually were.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:51AM
It remained far easier, however, to say what Americans were not or what they might become than to articulate what they actually were.
Jonilee
is on page 37 of 262
There was, quite simply, no way to conceive an American identity without Indians. At the same time, there was no way to make a complete identity while they remained.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:50AM
Jonilee
is on page 36 of 262
The exterior, savage Other assured Americans of their own civilized nature, and , more important, justified the dispossession of real Indians. The presence of actual Indians, persistently struggling to maintain land and sovereignty, necessitated the continued reconstruction of the savage, exterior Other throughout the 19th century.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:48AM
Jonilee
is on page 36 of 262
The uncertainty that continued to haunt Americans can be traced to the contradictory meanings assigned to interior and exterior Indians. Tammany and other interior Indians proved crucial in letting one oppose the Eng. and be Americ. Complete incorporation of this particular form of Indian was impossible, however, as long as its savage twin existed at the edge of expanding national borders.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:48AM
Jonilee
is on page 36 of 262
P2 ever effectively developing a positive, stand-alone identity that did not rely heavily on either a British or an Indian foil.
After the Revolution, Americans remained stuck in the middle, lost somewhere between "simultaneous identity" and "no identity."
— Sep 08, 2025 01:46AM
After the Revolution, Americans remained stuck in the middle, lost somewhere between "simultaneous identity" and "no identity."
Jonilee
is on page 36 of 262
In playing Indian, Americans invoked a range of identities...all of which emerged from the categories Indian and Briton. In the process they created a new Identity (American) that was both aboriginal and European and was also neither. ...Although this control was effective in establishing an American identity as both non-English and non-Indian, its continued openness prevented its creators from ever effectively P1
— Sep 08, 2025 01:45AM
Jonilee
is on page 36 of 262
liminal rituals.
social order disrupted when a new category created.
not an other but not an inner either
something new.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:42AM
social order disrupted when a new category created.
not an other but not an inner either
something new.
Jonilee
is on page 34 of 262
Tammany warriors and Tea Party Mohawks transformed metaphor into a theatrical reality, literally becoming what they were not.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:37AM
Jonilee
is on page 30 of 262
everyone is drawing Indians to use a symbol of the colonies meanwhile the actual Indians are dying by starvation, illness, genocide, etc. etc etc etc.
white people be whiting while the brown people they're using as symbols are dying.
— Sep 08, 2025 01:32AM
white people be whiting while the brown people they're using as symbols are dying.

