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- Title
Sacagawea and Son: The Visual Construction of America's Maternal Feminine.
- Authors
Vettel-Becker, Patricia
- Abstract
Through an analysis of public statues commemorating Sacagawea, I argue that her maternal body has come to symbolize the American frontier and the “birth” of a new nation. Her “willingness” to guide Lewis and Clark on America’s most sacred mission into the wilderness has served to sanctify the “civilized” settlement of the fecund “native” land she represents, as does her giving up of her young son to Clark, a self-sacrificial act in keeping with the mythic construct of the maternal feminine, which in this case enables historical realities concerning race, genocide, appropriation, displacement, slavery, and sexual abuse to be submerged.
- Subjects
UNITED States; SACAGAWEA, ca. 1788-1812; LEWIS &; Clark Expedition (1804-1806); WOMEN in art; MOTHERS in art; INDIGENOUS peoples of the Americas in art; ART &; history; WOMEN heroes in art; COLLECTIVE memory; 20TH century American sculpture; NATIVE Americans in popular culture; POPULAR culture; HISTORY of popular culture
- Publication
American Studies (00263079), 2009, Vol 50, Issue 1/2, p27
- ISSN
0026-3079
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/ams.2011.0068