How Did Othering Contribute To The Dehumanization Of Native Americans

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The history of Native American and European colonial relations is wrought with conflict driven by cultural isolation. The isolation from the European view constituted an affirmation of their own beliefs and an association of “othering” of the native inhabitants. This detachment produced a hostile treatment of Native Americans that eventually led to a period of violent displacement and other deliberate genocidal acts. The act of "othering" is prominent in the works of Christopher Columbus and John Smith. This paper aims to explore how instances of "othering," as seen in commercial, religious, and personal accounts, have contributed to the dehumanization of Native Americans. The earliest accounts of the othering occurred through the journals and letters by Christopher Columbus from his “discovery” …show more content…

Columbus's description suggests a rather frail collective of people, who afterward, are plentiful in their gifting to Colombus’s expedition. This depiction implies a characterization of a young child of that of the natives on the island, as if it wouldn’t be any less rational to be skeptical of unfamiliar people arriving in their homeland. Furthermore, Colombus reflects on trading with the natives in one passage, “They took even the pieces of the broken hoops of the wine barrels and, like savages, gave what they had, so that it seemed to me to be wrong and I forbade it. And I gave a thousand handsome good things, which I had brought, in order that they might conceive affection, and more than that, might become Christians.” (Gustafson 48). While Colombus initially describes the natives positively, he inverts such thinking in how the Natives offered what they had for the pieces of hoops from the wine barrels, by referring to them as

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