Representation of the “Primitive” American Indian
by Guest Contributor Lisa Wade, originally published at Sociological Images
We owe many iconic images of American Indians to photographer Edward S. Curtis. Growing up in Wisconsin and Minnesota, Curtis began photographing Indians in 1895 and, in 1906, was offered $75,000 by JP Morgan to continue documenting their lives (wikipedia). The 1,500 resulting photographs inevitably impacted the image of Indians in the American imagination.


Later it came to light that Curtis’ photographs weren’t exactly pure representations. In some photographs, for example, he erased signs of modernity. The first photograph below, the un-edited version, includes a clock between the two men, whereas the edited version, following, does not.


Curtis also sometimes staged scenes and dressed paid participants in costumes, as in this photograph:

According to Wikipedia contributors:
In Curtis’ picture, Oglala War-Party, the image shows 10 Oglala men wearing feather headdresses, on horseback riding down hill. The photo caption reads, “a group of Sioux warriors as they appeared in the days of inter tribal warfare, carefully making their way down a hillside in the vicinity of the enemy’s camp.” In truth headdresses would have only been worn during special occasions and, in some tribes, only by the chief of the tribe. The photograph was taken in 1907 when natives had been relegated onto reservations and warring between tribes had ended. Curtis paid natives to pose as warriors at a time when they lived with little dignity, rights, and freedoms.
Curtis’ photographs, then, pushed his subjects back into a false past that non-Indian Americans would misrecognize as authentic for a hundred years.
The problem of misrepresentation of groups who have little power to control their own images is a widespread one. Shelby Lee Adams’ work was mired in controversy, with critics suggesting that he contributed to the belief that Appalachians were backward, imbred, and unintelligent. We might apply the same critical eye to representations of marginalized peoples today, like the representation of Arabs in video games and Italian-Americans on Jersey Shore and spin-offs.
Thanks to Dolores R. and Adrienne at Native Appropriations for the post idea.
- Dan Waters
- Anonymous
- http://blog.kristincraiglai.com Kristin Craiglai
- AJ
About This Blog
Racialicious is a blog about the intersection of race and pop culture. Check out our daily updates on the latest celebrity gaffes, our no-holds-barred critique of questionable media representations, and of course, the inevitableKeanu ReevesJohn Cho newsflashes.
Latoya Peterson (DC) is the Owner and Editor (not the Founder!) of Racialicious, Arturo García (San Diego) is the Managing Editor, Andrea Plaid (NYC) is the Associate Editor. You can email us at team@racialicious.com. The founders of Racialicious are Carmen Sognonvi and Jen Chau. Carmen runs Urban Martial Arts with her husband and blogs about local business. Jen can still be found at Swirl or on her personal blog.
Comments on this blog are moderated. Please read our comment moderation policy.
Use the "for:racialicious" tag in del.icio.us to send us tips. See here for detailed instructions.
Interested in writing for us? Check out our submissions guidelines.Follow Us on Twitter!
A Word From Our Sponsor
Dream of being the next Octavia Butler? Invest in yourself with Clarion West's Writer's Workshop. Applications are due March 1st, and scholarships are available. For more information, visit ClarionWest.org.
Support Racialicious
Recent Comments
- Silvena Chan on Very Smart Brothas’ Fauxpology, Too $hort’s “Advice,” And Muffling About Intraracial Sexual Violence
- Susan Donovan on Very Smart Brothas’ Fauxpology, Too $hort’s “Advice,” And Muffling About Intraracial Sexual Violence
- Susan Donovan on Nicki Ménages Urban Black and Latina Sexual Identities
- Anonymous on Nicki Ménages Urban Black and Latina Sexual Identities
- Anonymous on Very Smart Brothas’ Fauxpology, Too $hort’s “Advice,” And Muffling About Intraracial Sexual Violence
Recent Posts
- Nicki Ménages Urban Black and Latina Sexual Identities
- Very Smart Brothas’ Fauxpology, Too $hort’s “Advice,” And Muffling About Intraracial Sexual Violence
- Speaking Line-Up: Dartmouth, MIT, Duke, Asian American Writers Workshop, SXSW, Ohio State, NABJ
- Chris Brown, Male Violence, And Racist Rants
- Standing While Brown: A White Lady Tried To Get Me To Valet Her Car
- Asians Are Stealing Our Boyfriends On This American Life
- Weekend At Jeremy’s: The Lin Media Bandwagon Veers Off-Track
- Mailbag – February 20, 2012
Support Racialicious
Older Archives
Tags
activism advertising african-american asian asian-american barack obama black blackface celebrities comedy culture diversity fashion feminism film gender glbt heroes hip hop hispanic history hollywood identity international interracial relationships latino links media mixed race movies muslim politics race racial stereotypes racism religion sex sexism sexual stereotypes stereotypes tv Uncategorized violence white youtube













