Undergraduate Honors Thesis

 

The Cartographic Destruction of Bears Ears: Dispossession, Creating “Public” Land, and Fighting for Indigenous Conceptions of Space Público Deposited

https://scholar.colorado.edu/concern/undergraduate_honors_theses/5t34sk05j
Abstract
  • In late 2017, Bears Ears National Monument (BENM), the nation’s first Tribally initiated national monument, was significantly reduced in size by the Trump administration. Outdoor industry and environmental groups launched marketing campaigns that challenged the move. The clothing company Patagonia released a campaign marked by a slogan that read “The President Stole Your Land,” suggesting that the monument’s reduction had taken public land from all Americans. Although well meaning, this framing ignored the monument’s original intent—to protect the Tribal relationship to place—and the violent history of public lands creation. Both the administration’s move and Patagonia’s response suggests that public land is based on a notion of the public that excludes Indigenous people. To understand this exclusion, I enlist the help of maps. Maps convey certain spatial knowledges and privilege certain perspectives of space over others. This paper aims to show how maps abetted the dispossession of land from Indigenous people and reorganized space for the utility of a narrowly defined public that excludes Indigenous ways of knowing space. The framing of the monument’s reduction as a public lands issue by outdoor industry and environmental groups embraces a history of erasure and dispossession, and shifts the narrative away from Indigenous empowerment. Bears Ears, in its original form, figures as a challenge of inclusion from Tribes in public lands management, and the current battle to re-establish the original boundaries presents an opportunity for Americans to revisit our concept of public lands.
Creator
Date Awarded
  • 2019-01-01
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Subject
Última modificação
  • 2019-12-02
Resource Type
Declaração de direitos
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