Every California schoolchild's first interaction with history begins with the missions and Indians. It is the pastoralist image, of course, and it is a lasting one. Children in elementary school hear how Father Serra an...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Every California schoolchild's first interaction with history begins with the missions and Indians. It is the pastoralist image, of course, and it is a lasting one. Children in elementary school hear how Father Serra and the priests brought civilization to the groveling, lizard- and acorn-eating Indians of such communities as Yang-na, now Los Angeles. So edified by history, many of those children drag their parents to as many missions as they can.
 
Then there is the other side of the missions, one that a mural decorating a savings and loan office in the San Fernando Valley first showed to me as a child. On it a kindly priest holds a large cross over a kneeling Indian. For some reason, though, the padre apparently aims not to bless the Indian but rather to bludgeon him with the emblem of Christianity. This portrait, too, clings to the memory, capturing the critical view of the missionization of California's indigenous inhabitants. I carried the two childhood images with me both when I went to libraries as I researched the missions and when I revisited several missions thirty years after those family trips. In this work I proceed neither to dubunk nor to reconcile these contrary notions of the missions and Indians but to present a new and, I hope, deeper understanding of the complex interaction of the two antithetical cultures.


Similar Products

Mining California: An Ecological HistoryAbiding Courage: African American Migrant Women and the East Bay CommunityAcid Dreams: The Complete Social History of LSD: The CIA, the Sixties, and BeyondChinese San Francisco, 1850-1943: A Trans-Pacific Community (Asian America)The World They Made Together: Black and White Values in Eighteenth-Century VirginiaThe Pueblo Revolt of 1680: Conquest and Resistance in Seventeenth-Century New MexicoDaily Life of the Aztecs on the Eve of the Spanish ConquestIndigenous Quotient/Stalking Words: American Indian Heritage as FutureMigrant Daughter: Coming of Age as a Mexican American WomanThe Limits of Racial Domination: Plebeian Society in Colonial Mexico City, 1660–1720 (Writing)