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The Unsettlement of America: Translation, Interpretation, and the Story of Don Luis de Velasco, 1560-1945: Imagining the Americas

Autor Anna Brickhouse
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 noi 2014
The Unsettlement of America explores the career and legacy of Don Luis de Velasco, an early modern indigenous translator of the sixteenth-century Atlantic world who traveled far and wide and experienced nearly a decade of Western civilization before acting decisively against European settlement. The book attends specifically to the interpretive and knowledge-producing roles played by Don Luis as a translator acting not only in Native-European contact zones but in a complex arena of inter-indigenous transmission of information about the hemisphere. The book argues for the conceptual and literary significance of unsettlement, a term enlisted here both in its literal sense as the thwarting or destroying of settlement and as a heuristic for understanding a wide range of texts related to settler colonialism, including those that recount the story of Don Luis as it is told and retold in a wide array of diplomatic, religious, historical, epistolary, and literary writings from the middle of the sixteenth century to the middle of the twentieth. Tracing accounts of this elusive and complex unfounding father from the colonial era as they unfolds across the centuries, The Unsettlement of America addresses the problems of translation at the heart of his story and speculates on the implications of the broader, transhistorical afterlife of Don Luis for the present and future of hemispheric American studies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780199729722
ISBN-10: 0199729727
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: 2 illus.
Dimensiuni: 168 x 244 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Imagining the Americas

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

A marvelous achievement that profoundly unsettles fundamental assumptions about colonial encounters in the European conquest of the Americas. The fascinating story of a Native American translator, Don Luis de Velasco, powerfully challenges the binary between indigeneity and cosmopolitanism that structures past and present historical narratives. Brickhouse's intellectual creativity in reading against the grain, reaching across historical periods, and reflecting on methodology makes this book a model for future scholarship in hemispheric and transnational American studies.
Perhaps the most unsettling message of The Unsettlement of America is that a figure so important as the 'unfounding father' Don Luis de Velasco has largely been forgotten. In recovering his enigmatic presences-from his role in both advancing and thwarting the Spanish attempt to colonize the Chesapeake in the 1570s through a host of obscure and not-so-obscure texts down to the twentieth century-Anna Brickhouse reveals much about the agency of indigenous peoples in the continent's history, about the nature of translation and conquest, and about the logics and illogics of settler colonialism.
The Unsettlement of America is both a tremendous scholarly feat and a brilliant critical provocation. It traces the literary record of Don Luis de Velasco, a Native American anti-colonialist translator and captive from an area that the Spaniards called Ajacan and the English called Virginia, from the sixteenth to the twentieth century. Retrieving the history of this fascinating figure against the grain of a largely Euro-American colonialist archive written in Spanish and in English, this book represents a major intervention into colonial Latin American, (early) American, Hemispheric American, and Native American studies scholarship.

Notă biografică

Anna Brickhouse is Associate Professor of English at the University of Virginia. She is the author of Transamerican Literary Relations and the Nineteenth-Century Public Sphere.