“Geronimo !”历史与当代阿帕奇男性表现中的殖民与土著男性意识形态

Kevin R. Kemper
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引用次数: 7

摘要

很少有美国人关心美国军方在2011年5月击毙基地组织头目奥萨马·本·拉登时使用“杰罗尼莫”(Bedonkohe Apache)这个名字作为代号。他们只是很高兴在2001年9月11日恐怖袭击发生近十年后,奥萨马·本·拉登被击毙了。“正义得到了伸张,”奥巴马总统对全国和全世界说在对这次杀戮的热烈欢呼中,时任美国土著记者协会主席的朗达·勒瓦尔多(Rhonda LeValdo,阿科马·普韦布洛人)勇敢地公开反对“杰罗尼莫行动”这一说法,坚持要承认并制止对美洲印第安人的歪曲把这次行动命名为“杰罗尼莫行动”,似乎暗示了奥萨马·本·拉登就像杰罗尼莫一样,躲在山里,是美国的敌人。这种人与事的混淆引起了人们的关注。Michael Yellow Bird (Arikara [Sahnish]和Hidatsa)声称《纽约邮报》试图将Geronimo和其他原住民等同于恐怖分子波林·韦克汉姆认为,加拿大和新西兰的土著抵抗可以在反恐战争期间的国家安全背景下进行考察。5约翰·a·威克姆警告说,他认为9·11事件后出现了“新的天定命运”,这可能会对联邦印第安人政策产生有害影响“Geronimo !在历史和当代对阿帕奇男性的表现中,殖民地和土著男性的意识形态
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“Geronimo!” The Ideologies of Colonial and Indigenous Masculinities in Historical and Contemporary Representations about Apache Men
Too few Americans cared that the U.S. military used the name of Geronimo (Bedonkohe Apache) as code for alQaeda leader Osama bin Laden when he was killed in May 2011.1 They simply were glad almost a decade after the horrendous attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001, that Osama bin Laden was dead. “Justice has been done,” President Obama told the nation and world.2 Amid exuberance over the kill, Rhonda LeValdo (Acoma Pueblo), then president of the Native American Journalists Association, courageously took public exception to the phrase “Operation Geronimo,” insisting that the misrepresentations of American Indians be recognized and stopped.3 The implication of naming the mission “Operation Geronimo” seemed to be that Osama bin Laden had been like Geronimo, in that he had hidden in the mountains and was the enemy of the United States. This conflation of people and issues has raised concerns. Michael Yellow Bird (Arikara [Sahnish] and Hidatsa) claims the New York Post had attempted to equate Geronimo and other indigenous peoples with terrorists.4 Pauline Wakeham suggests that indigenous resistance in Canada and New Zealand can be examined in the context of national security during the War on Terror.5 John A. Wickham warns of what he sees as a “new Manifest Destiny” after September 11, which could have a deleterious effect on federal Indian policy.6 “Geronimo!” the Ideologies of Colonial and Indigenous masculinities in historical and Contemporary Representations about apache men
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