California Mission Landscapes: Race, Memory, and the Politics of Heritage

California Mission Landscapes: Race, Memory, and the Politics of Heritage

by Elizabeth Kryder-Reid
California Mission Landscapes: Race, Memory, and the Politics of Heritage

California Mission Landscapes: Race, Memory, and the Politics of Heritage

by Elizabeth Kryder-Reid

Paperback(3rd ed.)

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Overview

“Nothing defines California and our nation’s heritage as significantly or emotionally,” says the California Mission Foundation, “as do the twenty-one missions that were founded along the coast from San Diego to Sonoma.” Indeed, the missions collectively represent the state’s most iconic tourist destinations and are touchstones for interpreting its history. Elementary school students today still make model missions evoking the romanticized versions of the 1930s. Does it occur to them or to the tourists that the missions have a dark history? 

California Mission Landscapes is an unprecedented and fascinating history of California mission landscapes from colonial outposts to their reinvention as heritage sites through the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Illuminating the deeply political nature of this transformation, Elizabeth Kryder-Reid argues that the designed landscapes have long recast the missions from sites of colonial oppression to aestheticized and nostalgia-drenched monasteries. She investigates how such landscapes have been appropriated in social and political power struggles, particularly in the perpetuation of social inequalities across boundaries of gender, race, class, ethnicity, and religion. California Mission Landscapes demonstrates how the gardens planted in mission courtyards over the past 150 years are not merely anachronistic but have become potent ideological spaces. The transformation of these sites of conquest into physical and metaphoric gardens has reinforced the marginalization of indigenous agency and diminished the contemporary consequences of colonialism. And yet, importantly, this book also points to the potential to create very different visitor experiences than these landscapes currently do.

Despite the wealth of scholarship on California history, until now no book has explored the mission landscapes as an avenue into understanding the politics of the past, tracing the continuum between the Spanish colonial period, emerging American nationalism, and the contemporary heritage industry.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816637973
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 11/30/2016
Series: Architecture, Landscape and Amer Culture
Edition description: 3rd ed.
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 9.90(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Elizabeth Kryder-Reid is professor of anthropology and museum studies and director of the Cultural Heritage Research Center in the Indiana University School of Liberal Arts (IUPUI) and former director of the IUPUI Museum Studies Program.

Table of Contents

Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Missions, Memory, and Heritage
1. Into the Corral: Colonial Landscapes, Domination, and Resistance
2. Time Binding: The Invention of the Mission Garden
3. “Where It Belongs in Time and Place and Public Understanding”
4. Subtle and Peculiar Power: The Embodied Experience of Heritage
Conclusion: Third Spaces and the Future of Mission Memory Practices
Appendix: Plant List, Santa Barbara Mission Garden, 1903
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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