How was frontier expansion rationalized in the Americas during
the late nineteenth century? As new states fleshed out expanded
national maps, how did they represent their advances? Were there
any distinct pan-American patterns? The renowned anthropologist and
human rights advocate David Maybury-Lewis saw the Latin American
frontiers as relatively unknown physical spaces as well as
unexplored academic territory. He invited eight specialists to
explore public narratives of the expansion of Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, and the western regions of Canada and the United States
during the late nineteenth century, a time when those who then
identified as Americans claimed territories in which indigenous
peoples, who were now seen as economic and political obstacles,
lived. The authors examine the narrative forms that stirred or
rationalized expansion, and emphasize their impact on the native
residents.
The authors illustrate the variety and the similarities of
these nationalist ideas and experiences, which were generally
expressed in symbolic and cultural terms rather than on simple
materialist or essentialist grounds. The cases also point out that
civic nationalism, often seem as inclusive and more benign than
ethnic nationalism, can produce similarly destructive human and
cultural ends. The essays thus suggest a view of nationalism as a
theoretical concept, and of frontier expansion as a historical
phenomenon.
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