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Sunday, February 10, 2019

Western Perceptions of the American Indian Essay -- Indians Native Ame

Western Perceptions of the Ameri move IndianIn this reflective essay, I discuss how the Europeans perceived the American Indians and the factors that molded these perceptions. I have paid particular attention to the first-hand accounts of the encounters with the natives, written by Western explorers, missionaries, and visitors to the New World. It is particularly interesting to note how these accounts were distorted and work by different groups, each trying to mold the situation in their own way. We shall start with a reflection on cannibalism, and the myriad myths it engendered, since it can be argued that nothing about the Indians alienated the Europeans as much as this bizarre practice. Cannibalism, formally known as anthropophagy, was an anathema to Europeans armed with Christian precepts about morality and kindness to ones fellow man. It was reason of these acts that served to perpetuate many of the negative portrayals of the Indians that spread throughout the old continent. slice the Europeans were certainly disgusted by cannibalism, nevertheless, it still served to intrigue them. Indeed, many explorers, upon arriving at the Americas, sought to witness it for themselves. We can deduce from these tales that there is something inherently foreign about the concept of eating world flesh that has captivated the human imagination for millennia. The noted anthropologist William Arens is known to have said that Cannibalism is so unafraid to think about that the human appetite is not easily satisfied. close to theorists have suggested that myths of cannibalism were exploited to demonize those whom the Westerners sought to colonize. (Some radical historians even take that tales of cannibalism may have been mere fabri... ...--------------------------------- 1 Kimberle S. Lopez, Latin American Novels of the Conquest (London University of second Press, 2002) 30.2 Geoffrey Symcox, ed. Italian Reports on America 1493-1522 Letters, Dispatches, and Papal Bulls. (Belgium Brepols Publishers, 2001) 43.3 Bartholome de las Casas, Brief Account of the demolition of the Indies. (1542) 4 Michel de Montaigne, Of Cannibals, In Selected Essays of Montaigne, trans. Donald M. Frame. (New York Walter J. Black, 1943) 85-6.5 Lynn Glaser, America on Paper The First Hundred days (Philadelphia Associated Antiquaries, 1989) 161. 6 Bart L. Lewis, The Miraculous Lie Lope de Aguirre and the Search for El Dorado in the Latin American Historical Novel (New York Lexington Books, 2003) 8.7 Lewis 12.

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