Crafting "The Indian" : Knowledge, Desire, and Play in Indianist Reenactment
by Petra Tjitske Kalshoven
English | 2012 | ISBN: 0857453440 | 300 Pages | PDF | 1.98 MB
by Petra Tjitske Kalshoven
English | 2012 | ISBN: 0857453440 | 300 Pages | PDF | 1.98 MB
In Europe, Indian hobbyism, or Indianism, has developed out of a strong fascination with Native American life in the 18th and 19th centuries. "Indian hobbyists" dress in homemade replicas of clothing, craft museum-quality replicas of artifacts, meet in fields dotted with tepees and reenact aspects of North American Indian lifeworlds, using ethnographies, travel diaries, and museum collections as resources. Grounded in fieldwork set among networks of Indian hobbyists in Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, and the Czech Republic, this ethnography analyzes this contemporary practice of serious leisure with respect to the general human desire for play, metaphor, and allusion. It provides insights into the increasing popularity of reenactment practices as they relate to a deeper understanding of human perception, imagination, and creativity.
“…One of the most exciting works I have read in a long time… As a multi-sited ethnography it does an excellent job of covering the Indianist phenomenon in at least six European countries, with nuanced attention to differences and relating those differences to specific historic conditions or events.” - Nelson Graburn, University of California, Berkeley