I found this prompt to be one that is a bit challenging to
answer, despite the fact Jack and I were the ones to develop it. I do find
Prescott’s work to be overall more
valuable (at least today) as a primary source utilized to better understand the
mindset of the period in which he is writing. With this said however, after
reading his work it became abundantly clear Prescott knew the subject matter well he
was writing about through extremely in-depth research and thought. He
continually cites sources, even openly noting when they contrast with his own conclusions,
and illustrates a spring of knowledge about the conquest, Cortes, and even the
Native Americans. It was still plagued by the same problems, one would expect,
that were present in 19th century American ideology and
historiography.
Prescott’s romanticization of the life of Cortes, and by extension
the Western enterprise, as well as his constant belittling and degrading comments
towards the natives are two of the main sources of bias that yield a harvest of
silences. The most apparent, from my perspective, would be the motives and
understanding behind the Native American actions. His section on the seizing of
Montezuma illustrates a complete disregard for, what I would imagine are, the emperor’s actual motives,
but rather Prescott utilizes the scene to package his own ideas and place before
the reader. I, and most likely Troillot, would be extremely interested in
delving deeper into the actions of the Aztecs, including Montezuma, to better
understand the Conquest from their perspective. Perhaps this section would have
had a different effect on a 19th century audience, however for me I
found myself completely sympathetic to Montezuma and wishing I had more
knowledge of him, rather than glorified Cortes the aggressor.
A more specific kind of silence that I noticed when it comes
to the Native Americans is the Western interpretation of their motives. I once,
during my undergraduate years, read The Diary of Mary Rowlandson, a 17th
century Puritan women who is kidnapped by Native Americans. She writes her
experiences down in a diary in which she attempts to understand the Native
American culture and thought processes. Even though her work is of an earlier
era, perhaps even closer to that of Cortes, and of a different demographic, I
noticed distinct parallels between her thought process and that of the 19th
century Prescott.
Both Prescott and Rowlandson utilized their framework of
ideology to both subvert the Native Americans legitimacy as well as vindicate
their own. When they encounter acts of grandeur and greatness in the native
populations, they easily dismiss such accomplishments in two distinct ways.
First, they attribute such accomplishments as simply acts of God/Providence which
utilized the natives as a medium for divine work. Secondly, they interpret such
acts as the natural progression of civilization that’s inherent in all humans. This
notion is turned on the natives because their lack of Western standards of
development illustrates their inherent subservience. In an essence, they are
potential energy diffused by their fallacies whom are in need of help from the
epitome of civilization, the West. When it comes to the shortcomings of the
natives, in Prescott and Rowlandson’s minds, they are however all too eager to
utilize such facts as ammunition against the legitimacy of the Native
Americans. Both stances directly vindicate their own predispositions and belief systems.
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