Seeing the four sacred mountains: Mapping, landscape and Navajo sovereignty

Q2 Arts and Humanities
L. Siddons
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In 1968, photographer Laura Gilpin published The Enduring Navaho, which intentionally juxtaposes colonialist cartography with an immersive understanding of landscape. This article situates Gilpin’s project within the broader historical trajectory of traditional Navajo spatial imaginaries, including the work of contemporary Navajo artist Will Wilson. Euramerican settler-colonist maps of the Navajo Nation at mid-century were tools for Native displacement, revealing the transnational dilemma of the Navajo people. Their twentieth-century history was one of continual negotiation; on a pragmatic level, it often entailed the cultivation and education of Euramerican allies such as Gilpin. For her, landscape photography offered an alternative indexical authority to colonial maps, and thus had the potential to redefine Navajo space in the Euramerican imagination ‐ in terms that were closely aligned with Navajo ideology. Without escaping the contradictions inherent in her postcolonial situation, Gilpin sought a political space for Navajo epistemology, and thus for Navajo sovereignty.
看到四座圣山:地图、景观和纳瓦霍主权
1968年,摄影师劳拉·吉尔平出版了《持久的纳瓦霍》,有意将殖民主义制图与对景观的沉浸式理解并置。本文将吉尔平的项目置于传统纳瓦霍空间想象的更广泛的历史轨迹中,包括当代纳瓦霍艺术家威尔·威尔逊的作品。本世纪中叶,欧美定居者殖民者绘制的纳瓦霍民族地图是原住民流离失所的工具,揭示了纳瓦霍人的跨国困境。他们二十世纪的历史是不断谈判的历史;在务实的层面上,它往往需要培养和教育像吉尔平这样的欧美盟友。对她来说,风景摄影为殖民地图提供了另一种索引权威,因此有可能重新定义欧美想象中的纳瓦霍空间——与纳瓦霍意识形态紧密一致。在不逃避后殖民时代固有矛盾的情况下,吉尔平为纳瓦霍人的认识论,从而为纳瓦霍主权寻求政治空间。
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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来源期刊
European Journal of American Culture
European Journal of American Culture Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
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