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Missionaries and Borderlands: «The Mission Play» and Missionary Practices in Alta California
Author(s) -
David Melendez
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pamiętnik teatralny
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2658-2899
pISSN - 0031-0522
DOI - 10.36744/pt.982
Subject(s) - dualism , indigenous , colonialism , historiography , dialectic , history , drama , aesthetics , sociology , literature , epistemology , archaeology , philosophy , art , ecology , biology
This essay takes up a core question of this issue of Pamiętnik Teatralny: how are we to think about historiography beyond a dualism, settled in time and reflective of the status quo? With respect to the California missions, historical treatments of colonization revolve around a dualism shaped by moral dimensions of the missionary enterprise—did the missions help California Indians or harm them? Theatrical representations, like the wildly successful early twentieth century pageant drama, The Mission Play, staged a version of mission history that argued for the former. As a representation of the mission past, the play conflated missions, as institutions, with the moral character of missionaries, thus edifying a fantasy and entrenching the dualism. However, attention to missionary practices, like keeping time using the mission bell, reveal how the missions were sites where indigenous and colonial realities were in constant conflict. Through practices, relations between missionaries and indios produced a space that was neither strictly colonial nor indigenous, and yet both—a borderland. As a mode of spatial dialectics, borderlands thinking can unsettle the duality underlying representations of the mission past to question how that dualism has come into being.

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