Chris Blattman

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Just when you thought genocide could not get worse

[In 2010, the Census Bureau reported that] 819,105 Americans claimed at least one Cherokee ancestor…

The Cherokees resisted state and federal efforts to remove them from their Southeastern homelands during the 1820s and 1830s. During that time, most whites saw them as an inconvenient nuisance, an obstacle to colonial expansion. But after their removal, the tribe came to be viewed more romantically, especially in the antebellum South, where their determination to maintain their rights of self-government against the federal government took on new meaning.

Throughout the South in the 1840s and 1850s, large numbers of whites began claiming they were descended from a Cherokee great-grandmother. That great-grandmother was often a “princess,” a not-inconsequential detail in a region obsessed with social status and suspicious of outsiders.

By claiming a royal Cherokee ancestor, white Southerners were legitimating the antiquity of their native-born status as sons or daughters of the South, as well as establishing their determination to defend their rights against an aggressive federal government, as they imagined the Cherokees had done. These may have been self-serving historical delusions, but they have proven to be enduring.

Via Slate.

I found it on Snippets of Random, a blog of miscellaneous clippings that interest Naunihal Singh. He is easily one of the most reliable curators of idiosyncratic interesting intellectual  items on the Internet. This is a rare talent. You can follow him on Twitter or sign up for his snippets by email here.

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