Animality as an excuse for murder: David Grann and Killers of the Flower Moon

Izabela Morska
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Abstract

This paper examines the investigative nonfiction book Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann, which explores a series of murders of vulnerable members of the Osage tribe that took place in northeastern Oklahoma between 1918 and 1931. Grann’s account reveals how white citizens, ranchers, and townsfolk conspired against their Native American neighbors in a scheme involving poisoning, arson, deception, and falsified death certificates. The direct motivation for these crimes was greed triggered by income from oil deposits discovered in the land where the Osage were relocated after a century of broken treaties and other misfortunes. Furthermore, the paper explores how the supposed animality of the victims was employed to conceal and excuse genocidal tendencies against Native tribes, and how contemporary Native American accounts attest to their sense of unreality, resulting in the unclear status and uncanny subsistence of a living person reduced to the status of a ghost. In a broader perspective this paper discusses the colonization of America and its impact on the indigenous tribes who already inhabited the land. The demeaning metaphor of Indians as beasts yielded to a more palatable representation of the Noble Savage, but the accusations of bestiality returned when the tribes attempted to protect their way of living. The colonizers believed that by not cultivating the land and not building large, permanent communities, the indigenous tribes had forfeited their title to the land; those who resisted were conveniently labeled as pests to justify their inevitable erasure. The paper recalls rarely cited evidence, dating back to the history of the suppression of the 1652 Irish rebellion, to examine the multitudinous ways in which language played an important part in justifying the supposed animality of the indigenous people and eradicating them to make room for governmentauthorized settlers.
以动物为谋杀的借口:大卫·格兰和花月杀手
本文考察了大卫·格兰的非虚构类调查性书籍《花月杀手:奥塞奇族谋杀案和联邦调查局的诞生》,该书探讨了1918年至1931年间发生在俄克拉荷马州东北部的一系列奥塞奇族弱势成员谋杀案。格兰的叙述揭示了白人公民、农场主和城镇居民是如何密谋反对他们的印第安邻居的,他们策划了一个涉及投毒、纵火、欺骗和伪造死亡证明的阴谋。这些罪行的直接动机是贪婪,因为在奥塞奇族经过一个世纪的破坏条约和其他不幸之后重新安置的土地上发现了石油储备的收入。此外,本文还探讨了受害者的所谓兽性是如何被用来掩盖和原谅针对土著部落的种族灭绝倾向的,以及当代印第安人的叙述如何证明他们的不真实感,导致一个活着的人的不明确地位和不可思议的生存状态被降低到幽灵的地位。从更广泛的角度来看,本文讨论了美洲的殖民化及其对已经居住在这片土地上的土著部落的影响。把印第安人比喻成野兽的贬损行为,让位于对“高贵的野蛮人”更令人愉快的描述,但当部落试图保护自己的生活方式时,对兽交的指责又回来了。殖民者认为,如果不耕种土地,不建立大型的永久社区,土著部落就丧失了对土地的所有权;那些抗拒的人被方便地贴上了有害生物的标签,以证明他们不可避免地会被消灭。论文回顾了很少被引用的证据,可以追溯到1652年镇压爱尔兰叛乱的历史,研究了语言在证明土著居民的所谓兽性和消灭他们为政府授权的定居者腾出空间方面发挥重要作用的多种方式。
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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