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Journal ArticleDOI

What to the American Indian Is the Fourth of July? Moving beyond Abolitionist Rhetoric in William Apess's Eulogy on King Philip

Drew Lopenzina
- 01 Dec 2010 - 
- Vol. 82, Iss: 4, pp 673-699
TLDR
Lopenzina et al. as discussed by the authors make the attempt to regard Apess's narrative from "native space," weighing the loose materials of his life as he recorded them against a deeper understanding of indigenous tradition and practice, and begin to see Apess as an active participant in a network of Native community and belief.
Abstract
Nineteenth-century Pequot minister William Apess has appeared to many readers over the years as a Native American figure who fully assimilated into the expectations of the dominant culture, his role as Christian minister placing an insuperable distance between him and the traditions of his people. More recently, critics have come to find in Apess a radical voice latching on to the power of the pulpit and the rhetoric of the abolitionist movement to argue for Native rights. In either case, Apess seems to have risen up from a kind of intellectual vacuum with no way of accounting for his inspired activism. Lopenzina seeks to relocate Apess within the intellectual traditions of the Native northeast. If Apess appears as an isolated figure, having achieved a measure of success in spite of his inauspicious origins, this may have something to do with the oral methodologies of Native peoples in the nineteenth century and the archival absences imposed by a settler culture determined to make Natives "vanish" from the colonial scene. When we make the attempt to regard Apess's narrative from "Native space," weighing the loose materials of his life as he recorded them against a deeper understanding of indigenous tradition and practice, we begin to see Apess as an active participant in a network of Native community and belief. Eulogy on King Philip shows Apess connecting with Native methodologies in heretofore unnoticed ways, drawing on traditional Native diplomacy and the "tragic wisdom" of his people to carve out a message of interracial peace.

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Journal ArticleDOI

THE BLACK MODEL MINORITY: Slavery, Settlement, and the Genealogy of the Model Minority

Bayley J. Marquez
- 21 Sep 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a genealogical examination of the contradictory history of the "Black model minority" within the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute's Indian Program is presented, arguing that the Black model minority at Hampton was predicated on upholding slavery through defining it as an educational project and that slavery and land dispossession are intimately linked through pedagogy.
Journal ArticleDOI

William Apess, Pequot Pastor: A Native American Revisioning of Christian Nationalism in the Early Republic

Ethan Goodnight
- 27 Jan 2017 - 
TL;DR: This paper investigated Apess's relationship with the Christian nationalism of his day and concluded that Apess should be read as advancing his own revised form of Christian nationalism; his plan for the future of America and national unity embraced establishing a more perfect Christian union.
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