Native American

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Native Americans are the peoples who live in North, Central, and South America, and are the descendants of those who lived there before the European invasions commencing in the late fifteenth century. Hundreds, or possibly thousands, of tribes and cultures have been recorded, although many were wiped out completely during the bloody territorial expansions of colonial and post-colonial settlement.

Certain circumpolar peoples are sometimes excluded from the definition of Native Americans. Native Hawaiians, as well as other groups like the Chamorro and Samoans, are sometimes included in the definition despite being from a completely different cultural group that was not part of the Americas. Most Hispanic peoples in the Americas have some Native American ancestry, as do smaller numbers of whites and blacks. Somewhat larger numbers of whites and blacks will claim Native American ancestry out of embarrassment for what is really, respectively, black or white ancestry.

What's in a name?[edit]

Some real actual original Native Americans

It is often debated what term should be used for them: "American Indian"/"Amerindian" or "Native American", though one termWikipedia is certainly a no-go. "Injun" is probably out too. The use of the term "Indian" originates from Christopher Columbus's belief on reaching the Caribbean islands in 1492 that he had instead reached Asia, which was referred to as India at the time (specifically, he believed the island of Hispaniola was "Cipangu" or Japan). Despite the fact that others soon realized his mistake, this name has stuck for over five hundred years. The term "Native American" was introduced during the late twentieth century as a more accurate alternative, and a way to distance Native American citizens from hackneyed "Cowboys and Indians" stereotypes, although the term "native" may not be much of a step forward given that it has heavy colonialist and racist origins and has traditionally been used in Africa and Asia to reinforce the racial-political dynamics of white colonial rulership over "native" masses. Also it's not technically a distinction anyway, since anyone born on this continent is also technically a native American (note the lower-case "n" in native). Some "Native Americans" have rejected this term, in favor of the first incorrect term, "Indian", in a move to say, "You gave it to us once, now you want to change it again. This time we say, 'No.'"[note 1] Sometimes to the chagrin of people from India.[note 2]

The term Native American has, rightly or wrongly, been associated with other politically correct language and euphemisms. As a reference to people who are native to the continent of America the term "native American" is clearly an absolutely correct term. However, as the name "American" is used in some languages to refer solely to the citizens of the United States, some have suggested the use of other terms such as Native Canadian and, presumably, Native Mexican, Native Argentinian or whatever. Most Native Americans in the United States today typically refer to themselves and others as "Indians". An example of this was the radical group that named itself the American Indian Movement.

Some people like to say "If you were born here, you are a native American", thus devaluing the usage of a people who say "yeah? Well we were here first, you ingrates".[1] Others say the term "Indian" is both inaccurate and confusing.[note 3] Another term often used to refer to those who lived in the Americas prior to the arrival of Europeans is "First Nations", the official term in Canada for those people descended from the pre-colonial indigenous nations of Canada. The best term to use for indigenous people(s) from the Americas and their descendants is their tribal name when known. If you really really really just gotta talk about the indigenous people of America as a collective, choose one term and stick with it throughout any paper, article, or presentation.[note 4]

Muddying the water still further, recent archaeological evidence suggests that the peoples known today as American Indians or Native Americans were actually the second wave of settlers who crossed the land bridge into North America during the last Ice Age. The first wave of settlers included individuals that resembled the Ainu of Japan, and were completely displaced by the second wave.[citation needed]

Cultures[edit]

Native peoples of the Americas had rich and vast societies with thousands of different cultures. There have been estimates of upwards of 2000 languages, as distinct from one another as Chinese is from English. No one belief, idea, or cultural artifact can be attributed to all Native American people. And to those from a more conservative mind set, Yes Virginia, there really were written languages, cities with hundreds of thousands of people,[2] complex man-made waterways, and even pollution.

Woo[edit]

Native Americans are a proud people with a noble heritage... a noble heritage that anyone can claim.
—Lisa Simpson, The Simpsons, season 18, ep. 12 ("Little Big Girl")

Some Native American religious practices have been appropriatedWikipedia by white people, often associated with the New Age movement, and often with little real understanding of the cultures and people whose religious practices they have appropriated. Notable white promoters of such woo have included Ernest Thompson Seton, Carlos Castañeda, Tom Brown, Jr., Steven Seagal, and Tom Laughlin's Billy Jack movies. Castañeda's books have proven to be fiction and Brown's are widely suspected to also be fiction. See the bookshelf of your local New Age bookstore for dozens of other examples. Some people try to pretend to be Native American but aren't are known pejoratively as "pretendians"Wikipedia ("pretend" + "Indian").

Examples of these practices include "vision questing", "sweat lodges", and shamanism. Often these are commercial enterprises selling such experiences to New Age seekers, which angered one tribe enough over commercialization of religious beliefs to issue a "Declaration of War Against the Exploiters of Lakota Spirituality".[3] The nickname "Silver Lake shaman" (Silver Lake being a hip neighborhood in Los Angeles) has become popular among some Native Americans, particularly in New Mexico and other parts of the Southwest, an area whose native tribes and culture have long been fetishized in this manner.[4]

Usually this woo doesn't result in physical harm, though on occasion such commercialized New Age nonsense can turn deadly.[5]

Particularly irksome phenomena include:

  • White wannabe shamans taking phony Indian-sounding names like "Sun Bear"[6] and "Brooke Medicine Eagle".[7] A common pejorative for these people is "plastic shaman."[8]
  • The above is usually accompanied by further stereotypical representation of native culture that simplifies the culture and iconography of the plains and some Pacific tribes, throws them into one big stew, and applies it to the entire native population. The popularization of totem poles is a good example of this. Totem poles were, in fact, only built by tribes of the Pacific Northwest (modern day Oregon, Washington and Alaska in the US and British Columbia in Canada) such as the Kwakwaka'wakw (Kwakiutl), Tlingit, Chinook, etc. and their construction had gone into decline during the 19th century due to the banning of potlatch ceremonies, which was when new totem poles were commonly raised. The poles made a comeback when they started drawing tourists to reservations and scaled down versions were carved as souvenirs.[9] As a result, tribes that never even constructed totem poles pre-contact began to build them and sell related novelties in order to attract tourists and the poles have become an icon of "Native American-ness."
  • Mixing Native spirituality with drug culture mostly as an excuse to take peyote[10] or ayahuasca.
  • Harley "Swiftdeer" Reagan's sex seminars and martial arts system that he claims are based on Cherokee teachings.[11]
  • The "Nephites" and "Lamanites" are claimed as ancestors of Native Americans in the Book of Mormon; this has led to a cottage industry of Mormon apologetics citing Native American beliefs and cherry picking parallels between them and those of the Israelites. As bad as the New Agers, this is done without regard to the differences among tribes or much knowledge of modern anthropology.
  • Putative "Native American" tarot decks that mix clothing and symbols from many different tribes in the same images without regard for any accuracy.[12]
  • The Hopi language not having a concept of time (it does). Linguist Benjamin Lee Whorf (see Sapir-Whorf hypothesis) is to blame for this one, although his ideas were simplified by others, notably Stuart Chase (an economist not a linguist) in a 1958 article and folklorist John Greenway in 1964.[13][14]
  • Crystal woo. Various Native American tribes held beliefs about crystals (often quartz or rock crystal due to its wide availability), usually in relation to the crystals having sacred ceremonial value, healing abilities, or use in divination.[15] Thus, much crystal woo and crystal healing invoke Native American tropes.

Brain drain[edit]

Brain drain is a term commonly used by Native practitioners of Native religions to represent the loss of the important holy people and healers from the reservations and community centers to the great white New Age world. Life is simply better when some rich white woman pays you 10,000 dollars to lead her and her friends on a vision quest, rather than when the dirt poor native family might fix your car in exchange for their daughter's rite of passage. This migration of healers and holy people has left local communities with no one to lead them through traditions they have held for hundreds if not thousands of years.[citation needed]

Origins[edit]

See the main article on this topic: Pre-Columbian contact hypotheses

Amongst serious academics it is generally, though not universally, accepted that the first Native Americans reached the Americas from Siberia via the Bering Strait. Recent studies of coprolites (fossilized feces) have shed some doubt on this claim and caused some researchers to suggest that Native Americans arrived in boats before the Clovis people arrived via Siberia.[16] However, the origins of Native Americans have long been one of the favorite subjects of charlatans. Native Americans have been identified as Atlanteans, the Twelve Tribes of Israel, Carthaginians, Black Africans or even the Welsh. See also Joseph Smith, Jr..

Speaking the language[edit]

Look around, you probably already know tons of Indian nations, and can speak the language.

They are the States:

Neighboring soon-to-be colonies countries

  • Bahamas (Taino word)
  • Belize (possibly derived from a Mayan word)
  • Canada (Iroquois word for village)[17]
  • Chile (possibly derived from an Incan, Mapuche, or Quechua word)
  • Cuba (also Taino word)
  • Guatemala (Nahuatl word)
  • Guyana
  • Haiti (yet another Taino word)
  • Mexica (the primary tribe of the Aztecs)
    • Chocolate - from the Aztec word xocolatl
  • Panama (possibly derived from Kuna word)
  • Paraguay (Guarani word)
  • Peru (derived from the name of an indigenous ruler or translator, depending on whose story you believe)
  • Suriname (indigenous group)
  • Uruguay (also Guarani word)

Towns

  • Bogotá
  • Chicago (“wild onion")
  • Des Moines (related to Algonquin "Moingoana", a type of bird and name of a clan)
  • Erie, PA (named after the below-mentioned Iroquoian tribe that also lent its name to Lake Erie)
  • Guayaquil
  • Lima
  • Managua
  • Mannahatta (Algonquian for "Isolated thing in the Water" or "Land of many hills")
  • Miami
  • Milwaukee ("meeting of the rivers")
  • Nanaimo
  • Oaxaca
  • Ottawa
  • Puyallup
  • Qualicum
  • Quito
  • Saginaw
  • Seattle (anglicization of Si'ahl, a Suquawmish and Duwamish chief)
  • Squamish
  • Tegucigalpa
  • Toronto
  • Walla Walla

Even our cars

  • Winnebago (a tribe meaning "people of the smelly water")
  • Pontiac (a leader of the Ottawa)
  • Jeep Cherokee

They are our lakes and rivers

  • Lake Erie (derived from the name of an unfortunately now extinct Iroquoian tribe that inhabited the stretch of land below Lake Erie that would eventually become Northeast Ohio and Erie, PA.)
  • Mississippi River (derived from the Ojibwe term Mizi-shibii, meaning "Great River")
  • Ohio River (derived from the Seneca term ohi:yo, meaning "large creek")
  • Susquehanna River (derived from the name of the also sadly extinct Susquehannock tribe)

Pseudolinguistics[edit]

See the main article on this topic: Pseudolinguistics

There are various crank theories to the effect that certain Native American tribes speak or spoke Welsh, Chinese, Hungarian, or Old Norse.

When it came to Old Norse, there existed a Norse Language in Greenland.Wikipedia However, there were no records that the Inuit spoke or wrote it, as those runic inscriptions were written by the Vikings. The language also died out by the late 15th, or late 16th century.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. If you go to any Powwow, and tribal Council meeting, or even political rally you will either see "First Nations", or "Indian". [1], [2], [3] as three random examples
  2. Technically, the term for an American of Indian descent is "Indian-American", while one of indigenous decent is an "American Indian".
  3. Provoking probably rude and politically incorrect questions after the term is used, like "Indian — dot or feather?". (Rude and politically incorrect, of course, according to white people, who are naturally the best available judges of Native American feelings in the matter.)
  4. And if you might possibly actually have real, honest to Wakan Tanka indigenous people in the room, ask them what term they prefer.

References[edit]

  1. CP has had, at times, wild debates and edit wars over exactly what the term Native American should mean
  2. What is today's Mexico City, Tenochtitlan, had well over 100,000 people in the one city, larger than any European city at the same time.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20180818042937/http://www.aics.org/war.html
  4. Merlan, Anna. "Manifest Destiny-Lite With Souvenirs: Why Assholes in Turquoise Are Flooding the Southwest." Jezebel, 5 April 2018 (recovered 5 April 2018).
  5. http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/r/james_arthur_ray/index.html
  6. http://www.ewebtribe.com/StarSpiderDancing/wheel.html
  7. http://www.medicineeagle.com/
  8. Native Religions and Plastic Medicine Men, Williams College
  9. Wright, Robin K. Totem Poles: Heraldic Columns of the Northwest Coast. University of Washington Digital Collection.
  10. Also see "Temporarily Humboldt County", by The Firesign Theatre. "Got any peyote?"
  11. http://www.mail-archive.com/native_american@topica.com/msg01503.html
  12. http://www.lelandra.com/comptarot/tarotindian.htm
  13. See the Wikipedia article on Hopi time controversy.
  14. "Review of Hopi Time by Ekkehart Malotki", Leanne Hinton, American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 4 (Autumn, 1988), pp. 361-364, on JSTOR
  15. This paper describes some practices among tribes in California: Jerome Mayer Levi. Wii'ipay: The Living Rocks—Ethnographic Notes on Crystal Magic Among Some California Yumans. Journal of California Anthropology 5(1), 1978.
  16. Nature article on the subject
  17. http://www.pch.gc.ca/pgm/ceem-cced/symbl/o5-eng.cfm

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