From Starved Rock to Cancer Alley: Simulated Violence and Representational Collapse in the American West

Steffen Wöll
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Abstract

The Louisiana Purchase created a complex landscape of cultures and ethnicities located at the peripheries of the Early Republic. Some feared that it would threaten (White) American identity while others imagined the frontier as a clean slate on which the nation could reform its core values. Throughout the nineteenth century, axiomatic regeneration through (violent) experiences dominated peripheral-yet-central discourses of the American space. Shedding new light on the role of representation in the placemaking of the West, this article interweaves a reading of James Hall’s “The Pioneer” with experiences recovered from travelogues and diaries, as well as their embodiments in material culture. I argue that violence was not only a hallmark of settler colonialism but also a crucial narrative device that bridged the gaps between reality and fiction as well as center and margin. These dynamics, the article suggests, regularly culminated in representational excesses of conspicuous and consumable spectacles of violence.
从饥饿摇滚到癌症巷:美国西部的模拟暴力和代表性崩溃
路易斯安那购买案创造了一个复杂的文化和种族景观,位于早期共和国的边缘。一些人担心这会威胁到(白人)美国人的身份认同,而另一些人则认为边疆是国家可以改革其核心价值观的一块白板。在整个19世纪,通过(暴力)经验的公理再生主导了美国空间的外围但又中心的话语。本文将詹姆斯·霍尔(James Hall)的《拓荒者》(the Pioneer)与从游记和日记中获得的经验,以及它们在物质文化中的体现,结合起来,对再现在西方地域塑造中的作用进行了新的阐释。我认为,暴力不仅是定居者殖民主义的标志,也是一种重要的叙事手段,它弥合了现实与虚构、中心与边缘之间的鸿沟。这篇文章指出,这些动态经常在炫耀性和可消费的暴力场面的代表性过度中达到高潮。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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