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- Title
The US Mint, the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial, and the Perpetuation of the Frontier Myth.
- Authors
BAYERS, PETER L.
- Abstract
The article analyzes coins, mostly nickels, created by the U.S. Mint that aim to celebrate the Lewis and Clark expedition and the role of Native Americans in it, focusing specifically on how the U.S. Mint has obscured historical reality by ignoring the imperialist aspects of the expedition. The author first explains the importance of coins to a sense of national identity in the U.S. The Euro-American tradition of describing Native Americans as either ignoble or noble savages is examined by the author. The author describes these depictions of Native Americans as part of a white American national myth that justifies Native displacement. Specific emphasis is given to the portrayal of Sacagawea on a golden dollar.
- Subjects
UNITED States; UNITED States Mint; LEWIS &; Clark Expedition (1804-1806); IMPERIALISM in popular culture; COINS; FORCED removal of Native Americans; AMERICAN national character; NICKEL (Coin); SACAGAWEA, ca. 1788-1812; NOBLE savage; COLLECTIBLES; CENTENNIALS
- Publication
Journal of Popular Culture, 2011, Vol 44, Issue 1, p37
- ISSN
1540-5931
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1540-5931.2010.00818.x