George Catlin gained renown for his nineteenth-century paintings of Indians and their lands, sympathetic portraits that counterbalanced those of other Americans eager to conquer and dominate both. In this first book to probe the attitudes that shaped and constrained Catlin's career, John Hausdoerffer argues that, despite his sympathies, Catlin's work embodied the same prevailing sentiment toward Nature that sanctioned Indian removal and thus undercut his own alternate vision for westward expansion.
Some see Catlin as an ethical spokesman for Indians, others as a mere exploiter. Hausdoerffer steers a middle course, recognizing Catlin as an entrepreneur without invalidating his ethical perceptions. Yet through a close reading of Catlin's writings, Hausdoerffer adjusts interpretations of Catlin as a proto-environmentalist and friend of the Indian, arguing that contradictions in his work reveal his failure to comprehend his own complicity in Native America's demise.
Hausdoerffer examines key events from Catlin's career to show how his work consistently teeters between resistance and consent to nineteenth-century ideologies of Nature. He reviews Catlin's decision to devote his talents to Native American concerns, his journey west to document "vanishing" lifeways, his presentation of his findings to American audiences, and his performance of his work in Europe. He also shows the importance of Yellowstone National Park in understanding Catlin, given his vision for it as a means of preserving what is essential about environments and cultures.
Exploring the tension between Catlin's search for success and his awareness of the plight of his subjects, Hausdoerffer argues that Catlin's tacit acceptance of the inevitable demise of Native culture undermined his interest in fomenting political change. Catlin's lament for the vanishing Indian combined with his belief that art preserves the essence of nature ultimately contradicted his hopes for Indian justice and environmental preservation.
Catlin's Lament challenges views of Catlin's career as an ethical downfall, revealing instead a complexity of character that complicates views of dissent in the Jacksonian era. More important, it questions underlying assumptions of Manifest Destiny, showing that they were so deeply set in American life that even critics of the age helped perpetuate them.
行走世间,唯有淡定不破:遇事不慌、遇人不躁,拥有淡定、优雅的心,你,就可以重生!——美国心灵教父戴尔 ...
信息化的社会虽然给人们带来了不少的便利,但随之而来的心理问题和知识焦虑也越来越严重。要想在高焦虑、高压力的社会生活中保持清醒和高效,我们要学会用一种简单的思维方 ...
莫內斯提爾以誠諧且具洞察力的筆觸寫下這本空前絕後的獨特史書,用獨特角度來看塑造並影響個人、群體的道德風俗、感受、廉恥、社會規範的文明進程。 ... 16 作者註:丹尼爾,康納曼,這位認知心理學與行為經濟學的專家在普林斯頓工作。這本熱情洋溢且貢獻卓越 ...
Sandler , Todd , and John T . Tschirhart . 1980 . " The Economic Theory of Clubs : An Evaluative Survey . " Journal of Economic Literature 18 : 1481 - 521 . Scheffler , Israel . 1967 . Science and Subjectivity .
Franz Overbeck war einer der gro en Denker des 19.
The definitive edition of HPB's writings in 15 extensive volumes.
40669-5 OLD QUEENS , N.Y. , IN EARLY PHOTOGRAPHS , Vincent F. Seyfried and William Asadorian . Over 160 rare photographs of Maspeth ... 40903-1 THE BOOK OF THE SWORD , Sir Richard F. Burton . Great Victorian scholar / adventurer's ...
This work contains the keystone of his critical philosophy - the basis of human knowledge and truth.
E. Warren; On Aristotle's Categories, trans. S. Strange. Neoplatonic Philosophy, ed. J. Dillon and L. P. Gerson. Syrian School Iamblichus School ofAthens (closed byJustinian in 529 C.E.) Plutarch ofAthens, founder (circa 350–433 c.e.) ...
Political Disaffection Among British University Students : Concepts , Measurement , and Causes , by Jack Citrin and David J. Elkins . ( $ 2.00 ) 24. Urban Inequality and Housing Policy in Tanzania : The Problem of Squatting , by Richard ...