
Wild Men
Ishi and Kroeber in the Wilderness of Modern America
Sackman(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 10. December 2010
Book
Paperback/Softback
352 pages
978-0-19-517853-1 (ISBN)
Description
In late August of 1911, from deep within the shadows of a remote canyon in northern California, an Indian of the Yahi people, long-believed to have disappeared, suddenly showed himself. A fugitive, he had hidden for decades from the lethal gaze of white intruders, keeping fires small and wiping the earth clean of his footprints. The sheriff took him into custody, and, having no better place for him, put him in the cell reserved for those who were not quite right in the head-the insane. The man soon aroused local and then national curiosity, and was christened the Wild Man or Wild Indian. Alfred Kroeber, who would become one of the most famous anthropologists of his day, caught wind of the miraculous appearance of what he saw as a genuine Stone Age man "uncontaminated by civilization." Sackman's book, the sixth in Davidson and Stoff's "New Narratives" series, explores the issues surrounding the appearance of Ishi and his relationship with Kroeber. The myth woven about Ishi was a simple but powerful one-and one made to order for the day.
Ishi came to embody the true primitive, at a time when many Americans were lamenting the demise of wilderness and Indians (who, for better and for worse, had always been closely linked to wilderness in national mythology from the beginning). Now, with urban America on the ascent, the worlds of wilderness and Indians seemed to be disappearing. While that was celebrated as a triumph, it was also lamented as a loss. Perceived by many city dwellers as utterly different, Ishi was nonetheless felt to represent something they had lost. Ishi was an instant celebrity. The public turned out in droves to see Ishi make arrows and start fires. Indeed, everyone seemed fascinated by the city's new immigrant: journalists and showmen, society ladies and suffragettes, Boy Scouts and nature-lovers, and anthropologists too. Alfred Kroeber befriended Ishi, and brought him to live at the Smithsonian. In the end, Kroeber was profoundly moved by Ishi, so much so that when his informant-become-friend died just five years after his arrival in San Francisco, Kroeber said, "say for me that science can go to hell."
The phrase was conveyed in a telegram from New York, where Kroeber was visiting as Ishi succumbed to tuberculosis. He was trying to prevent an autopsy, but one was performed anyway. Ishi's brain was preserved in a glass jar (which was finally "repatriated" from the Smithsonian to the Pit River and Redding Rancheria Indians for reburial in August of 2000). Kroeber was shattered by the loss of his friend, and soon thereafter he went through psychoanalysis, took a leave of his position, and nearly gave up on anthropology altogether. The story of Ishi and Kroeber's relationship will allow the book to explore a set of interrelated topics, including the post-Gold Rush transformations of California and the West, the dispossession of Indians and native-white relations before and after the closing of the frontier, the impact of San Francisco ("nature's metropolis" of the Far West) on nature and people, and Americans' ambivalent embrace of modernity.
Because the narrative of Ishi and Kroeber so literally moves through the places that reflect these themes (the Sierras, San Francisco, the anthropological museum, even Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, which Ishi attended as a spectator), it is an especially promising way to tie them together.
Ishi came to embody the true primitive, at a time when many Americans were lamenting the demise of wilderness and Indians (who, for better and for worse, had always been closely linked to wilderness in national mythology from the beginning). Now, with urban America on the ascent, the worlds of wilderness and Indians seemed to be disappearing. While that was celebrated as a triumph, it was also lamented as a loss. Perceived by many city dwellers as utterly different, Ishi was nonetheless felt to represent something they had lost. Ishi was an instant celebrity. The public turned out in droves to see Ishi make arrows and start fires. Indeed, everyone seemed fascinated by the city's new immigrant: journalists and showmen, society ladies and suffragettes, Boy Scouts and nature-lovers, and anthropologists too. Alfred Kroeber befriended Ishi, and brought him to live at the Smithsonian. In the end, Kroeber was profoundly moved by Ishi, so much so that when his informant-become-friend died just five years after his arrival in San Francisco, Kroeber said, "say for me that science can go to hell."
The phrase was conveyed in a telegram from New York, where Kroeber was visiting as Ishi succumbed to tuberculosis. He was trying to prevent an autopsy, but one was performed anyway. Ishi's brain was preserved in a glass jar (which was finally "repatriated" from the Smithsonian to the Pit River and Redding Rancheria Indians for reburial in August of 2000). Kroeber was shattered by the loss of his friend, and soon thereafter he went through psychoanalysis, took a leave of his position, and nearly gave up on anthropology altogether. The story of Ishi and Kroeber's relationship will allow the book to explore a set of interrelated topics, including the post-Gold Rush transformations of California and the West, the dispossession of Indians and native-white relations before and after the closing of the frontier, the impact of San Francisco ("nature's metropolis" of the Far West) on nature and people, and Americans' ambivalent embrace of modernity.
Because the narrative of Ishi and Kroeber so literally moves through the places that reflect these themes (the Sierras, San Francisco, the anthropological museum, even Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, which Ishi attended as a spectator), it is an especially promising way to tie them together.
Reviews / Votes
"Nuanced and thought-provoking...Recommended for readers interested in Native American studies and particularly the fate of Ishi."--Library Journal"You would think the subject matter of Ishi has been thoroughly raked over by now, but Douglas Cazaux Sackman...has found two new seams that promise a payoff. [Wild Men] gives us new ways of thinking about the Ishi phenomenon."--History New Network
"This is a splendid narrative-touching, stark, and humane. Wild Men illuminates the lives and the worlds of these two remarkable men from the inside out."--Brian DeLay, University of Colorado, Boulder
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Illustrations
25 black and white halftones, 5 line illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
467 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-517853-1 (9780195178531)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
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E-Book
01/2010
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01/2010
1st Edition
OUP eBook
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01/2010
Oxford University Press Inc
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Person
Douglas Cazaux Sackman is Professor of History at the University of Puget Sound. He is the author of Orange Empire: California and the Fruits of Eden (2005) and the editor of A Companion to American Environmental History (2010).
Content
PROLOGUE: ONE SMALL STEP; 1. The Yahi in Three Worlds; 2. The Anthropologist in Three Worlds; 3. "Worlds of Stuff"; 4. Making Tracks; 5. City Lights; 6. Nature Walks in the City and the Sierras; 7. The Call of the Wild; 8. Death Mask; EPILOGUE: THE HEARTH OF PROMETHEUS AND THE WILDERNESS OF ISHI