Polyvalent Metaphors in South-Central California Missionary Processes

Author:

Robinson David

Abstract

AbstractThe Spanish missionary entrada (A.D. 1769 to 1833) along the California coast created a series of complex encounters between multiple cultural discourses. The Franciscan mission system directly brought colonial and indigenous cultural metaphorical understandings into play. Missionary and indigenous discourse interacted largely via the media of material culture, animals, embellished architecture, and landscape—media interpreted through preexisting cultural metaphors and understandings. Investigating how metaphors played a role in constituting colonial entanglements is important in understanding cultural interactions and change. Metaphors structured colonial interactions, simultaneously hindering and enabling missionary–indigenous relationships. These relationships created parameters for unforeseen transitory configurations: a process best theorized under the term polyvalence. By adopting polyvalence, the processes of colonialism can be approached without usage of ethnic or racialized terms such as creolization, hybridity, or amalgamation. In the case of indigenous south-central California, it is suggested here that widely different forms of evidence can be better appreciated without recourse to terms laden with racial or ethnic connotations. The evidence suggests that while missions may have failed to create entirely new ethnic groups, missionary endeavors did result in unanticipated outcomes, presenting problems and creative opportunities for indigenous groups living within immediate coastal and extended interior populations.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Museology,Archaeology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History

Reference117 articles.

1. Phillips George Harwood 1993 Indians and Intruders in Central California, 1769–1849. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.

2. Freers Steven M. 1994 A Shamanistic Pictograph Site in Northern San Diego County. In Rock Art Papers, 11, edited by Ken Hedges, pp. 59–71. San Diego Museum Papers, 31. San Diego Museum of Man, San Diego.

3. Robinson David W. 2010b Resolving Archaeological and Ethnographic Tensions: A Case Study from South-Central California. In Archaeological Anthropology: Understanding Similarities, Exploring Differences, edited by Duncan Garrow and Thomas Yarrow, pp. 84–109. Oxbow, Oxford.

4. Weinberger Gay 1993 Yokuts Rock Art from the Post-Contact Period. American Indian Rock Art 12:145–150.

5. Robinson David W. 2003 Harvest of Children and Tears of the Sun: Metaphor and Amalgamation in California Missionary Encounters. Paper presented at the Theoretical Archaeology Group Meetings, Lampeter, Wales.

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