what is history
Be sure to not only include the 5 things you found interesting in your reading, but
please also address the questions in this prompt:
So, how many of you, one of the first words that came to mind when thinking
about how Native Americans have been portrayed to you in other classes
(thinking all the way back to elementary school) was SAVAGES?
How many of you thought about small groups of half-naked people whooping
and hollering while dancing around a fire outside of a teepee?
Most people in my classes, this is their recollection of previous teachings on Native America. Surprising?
So what if I were to tell you that instead of the handful of Natives here in the
Americas, there were actually as many as 120 million of them in 1492? That this
population size was equal to that found in Europe at that time?
What if I told you that these “savages” lived in cities–sophisticated cities, many
more sophisticated than Paris, France at that time. Not just the Incas or the Mayans either…there were cities all over the Americas. That the Americas are home
to the greatest number of pyramids in the world…that the largest pyramid in the
world is actually in the Americas not in Egypt, and that one side of the base of
this pyramid measures a half mile in length? And that it has just been discovered
within the last 10 years because it had been literally swallowed up by the Amazon jungle?
Did any of you know all of this? Most of my students are dumbfounded by these
revelations.
And if I were to ask you to name something foundational to this country that we
have adopted from Native America, how many of you could give me an answer?
I ask you all of these things as we continue our discussions of the “discoverer” of
America, Christopher Columbus, for a reason. Was he truly the discoverer of this
land? Were there other foreigners who came here long before Columbus? Why
don’t we celebrate the Afro-Phoenicians (Africans) as “discoverers”of America?
Or the Chinese? For that matter, why do we celebrate a “discoverer” at all when
there were already 120 million people living here?
Why do we not celebrate Native Americans as one of the great “founders” of this
country as we do Columbus, or the Pilgrims, or Washington, Jefferson, etc? Are
they not part of our foundations? How would James Loewen explain this?
Especially since much of our ideas about democracy actually come from Native
Americans?
YES, DEMOCRACY…one of the ideas that makes up the very foundations of this
country comes from the Iroquois Confederacy.
I would bet very few of you knew this….
What are your thoughts about all of this? What other issues came up for you in
your readings and the lecture?
1. Please post an initial response of at least 150 words
You only need to write based on the reading. No outside source. I have attached the chapter 2 summary and the article as well.
This is the link of the article-