1491: NEW REVELATIONS OF THE AMERICAS
BEFORE COLUMBUS
By Charles Mann
Western civilization has long had a tendency to define itself in terms of
what it has written. Civilization begins with the development of a system of
writing, for how else can any society advance beyond the most primitive state
without a standardized system of communication and record-keeping? History, in
turn, is what has been written down. A people without a written language are
pre-historical.
This bias was expressed by the anthropologist Allen R. Holmberg, who lived
among the Siriono, a South American Indian tribe, in the 1940s. Despite being a
careful and compassionate researcher, he was also a man of his day. He concluded
that the Siriono were not only "among the most culturally backward peoples
of the world," but that they had always been that way. And, since
history is imagined as a narrative, as change (for better or for worse),
"they were people without history."
This is what Charles C. Mann describes as "Holmberg's Mistake": the
notion, which has held sway in the West for almost five centuries, that Native
Americans before Columbus lived in an eternal, unhistoried state, either as
vicious barbarians or noble savages. 1491 is a historical travelogue,
examining some of the ways Holmberg's Mistake is being corrected. Mann doesn't
have all the answers, or even a whole lot of "new revelations," but
instead focuses on areas the liveliest current debates over the nature of
pre-Columbian America.
That there are such debates, and that they can sometimes be so bitter, is
partly because of the absence of a written history, partly because of the nature
of the inquiry (where did maize come from? why didn't the Maya find a use for
the wheel?), and partly because of the politics involved. But through the use of
new techniques like DNA analysis and carbon-14 dating, possible answers to some
of the trickier questions are emerging, and new understandings of early American
civilizations are coming into view.
What led Holmberg, and others like him, to make the mistake of assuming
native Americans were without history was the effect of the Great Dying - the
massive demographic drop brought about by the introduction of European diseases
like smallpox into populations without any resistance to them. The American
civilizations that early European explorers encountered were mere shadows, the
Indians they met only the survivors of shattered cultures.
The Great Dying is just one of the current bones of contention 1491
addresses. Just how many died? There are High Counters and Low Counters,
revisionists and re-revisionists, all speculating on very little data. Some have
put the population of the entire hemisphere at less than 10 million, while
others argue that anywhere from 80 to 100 million (95% of the total population)
died at the beginning of the seventeenth century. As with most of the arguments
in this book, there is a political issue at stake. Were the Americas essentially
unoccupied when the European arrived? What sort of blame attaches to the disease-carriers?
Was this genocide?
The same political considerations inform debates over who were the
"first" Americans, how advanced early American civilizations really
were, and the relationship native peoples had with the environment. In the last
case the myth of Indians living in a perfectly balanced, natural relationship to
an environment they did nothing to shape (a variant on the idea of the
ahistorical and changeless native known as the "pristine myth") is
challenged by evidence that tribes may have been slashing and burning the Amazon
rain forest hundreds of years before the Europeans came. They lived in an
"artificial wilderness." Of course this doesn't make them into
precursors of today's Brazilian beef farmers, but one can see how even here the
battle lines are drawn.
Carr has no particular case to argue or axe to grind, and he does a good job
of presenting the range of evidence for the various debates surveyed here. This
is important, because despite all of the new techniques being employed by
scientists to discover more about the early history of the Americas it is clear
that other considerations, including those of a political and even personal
nature, also shape and direct the progress of our understanding. The past is an
artificial wilderness too.
Notes:
Review first published November 2, 2005.
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