The Performativity of Indigenous Protest: Vernon Bellecourt and the First Encounters Exhibition

File(s)
Date
2020-04-01Author
Little Jackson, Robert Olive
Department
Art History
Advisor(s)
Jennifer Johung
David Pacifico
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
At the Science Museum in St. Paul, Minnesota, Vernon Bellecourt of the American Indian Movement came to protest the arrival of the First Encounters: Spanish Explorations in the Caribbean and the United States: 1492-1570. To Bellecourt, the false narrative of Indigenous peoples represented the reality of the Columbus narrative that all indigenous peoples suffer from today. The gestures that Bellecourt engaged in during his protest performed an historic and powerful interconnected narrative. Bellecourt meant to perform an Indigenous cultural narrative of his own over that established Columbian narrative. This paper will locate First Encounters within a long tradition of interrelated Native protests and performances which took place on the Quincentennial of Columbus’s arrival in Native land where I will explore the aspects of the historical narrative that had been a part of Native American culture since the arrival of Columbus in 1492.
Subject
AIM
Columbus
First Encounters
Indigenous
Performance
Vernon Bellecourt
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/92500Type
thesis
