Title
Spaces of Remembering and Forgetting: The Reverent Eye/I at the Plains Indian Museum
Abstract
Museums, memorials, and other historic places are key sites in the construction of collective memory and national identity. The Plains Indian Museum in Cody, Wyoming is one such space of memory where the (pre)history of “America” and its native peoples is told. Based on the view of texts as experiential landscapes, it is argued that this museum works to absolve Anglo-visitors of the social guilt regarding Western conquest through a rhetoric of reverence. This rhetorical mode invites visitors to adopt a respectful, but distanced observational gaze. A concluding section assesses the social and political consequences of memorializing in this mode.
Department(s)
Communication
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14791420500505619
Keywords
Plains Indian Museum, collective memory, material rhetoric, experiential landscape, interpretive eye/I, reverence
Publication Date
3-1-2006
Recommended Citation
Dickinson, Greg, Brian L. Ott, and Eric Aoki. "Spaces of remembering and forgetting: The reverent eye/I at the Plains Indian Museum." Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies 3, no. 1 (2006): 27-47.
Journal Title
Communication