The approach of Thanksgiving, that quintessential American holiday, has me brooding over recent scientific portrayals of Native Americans as bellicose brutes.* When I was in grade school, my classmates and I wore paper Indian headdresses and Pilgrim hats and reenacted the “first Thanksgiving,” in which supposedly friendly Native Americans joined Pilgrims for a fall feast of turkey, venison, squash and corn. This episode seemed to support the view–often (apparently erroneously) attributed to the 18th-century philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau–of Native Americans and other pre-state people as peaceful “noble savages”.

Native Americans, accused of Hobbesian savagery by modern scientists, actually treated Europeans kindly in some early encounters. This painting shows the legendary Thanksgiving feast between Pilgrims and the Wampanoag, who helped the newcomers survive and were eventually driven from their land. [More]




Source: Thanksgiving and the Myth of the Savage Savage


David Cottle

UBB Owner & Administrator