Archived News |
October 15, 2009
ËÄÉ«AV history professor presents work at national conference
Roger Carpenter, assistant professor of history at the University of Louisiana at Monroe, presented a paper titled âStriving for Authenticity: âRealâ Indians, Scalping, and The Last of the Mohicansâ at the American Society for Ethnohistoryâs Annual Meeting, held from Sept. 30 - Oct. 4 in New Orleans.
Carpenterâs paper examined the 1936 film Last of the Mohicans and the effort made by the filmâs producers to find âreal Indiansâ for the film, as well as to accurately portray 18th century North American warfare. His paper discussed how these efforts proved to be a problem for the filmâs producers, as âscalpingâ proved to be too difficult to portray.
Carpenter also chaired a session titled âImages: Literary, Motion Picture, and âScientificâ Perspectives on North American Indians,â which examined native stereotypes in film, the tendency of European travel writers to refer to native leaders as âkingsâ and native authors in the 1890s critiquing US actions in Cuba and the Philippines.
The ASE was founded in 1954 to promote investigation of the Native Peoples of the Americasâ histories. This involves developing histories informed by ethnography, linguistics, archaeology and ecology.
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