Messianic Fulfillments

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Messianic Fulfillments

Staging Indigenous Salvation in America

Hayes Peter Mauro
 

300 pages
11 photographs, 35 illustrations, index

Hardcover

August 2019

978-0-8032-9995-5

$70.00 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

August 2019

978-1-4962-1626-7

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eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

August 2019

978-1-4962-1628-1

$70.00 Add to Cart

About the Book

In Messianic Fulfillments Hayes Peter Mauro examines the role of Christian evangelical movements in shaping American identity in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries. Focusing on Christianity’s fervent pursuit of Native American salvation, Mauro discusses Anglo American artists influenced by Christian millenarianism, natural history, and racial science in America. Artists on the colonial, antebellum, and post–Civil War frontier graphically projected their idealization of Christian-based identity onto the bodies of American Indians.

Messianic Fulfillments explores how Puritans, Quakers, Mormons, and members of other Christian millenarian movements viewed Native peoples as childlike, primitive, and in desperate need of Christianization lest they fall into perpetual sin and oblivion and slip into eternal damnation. Christian missionaries were driven by the idea that catastrophic Native American spiritual failure would, in Christ’s eyes, reflect on the shortcomings of those Christians tasked with doing the work of Christian “charity” in the New World.
              
With an interdisciplinary approach drawing from religious studies and the histories of popular science and art, Messianic Fulfillments explores ethnohistorical encounters in colonial and nineteenth-century America through the lens of artistic works by evangelically inspired Anglo American artists and photographers. Mauro takes a critical look at a variety of visual mediums to illustrate how evangelical imagery influenced definitions of “Americaness,” and how such images reinforced or challenged historically prevailing conceptions of what it means (and looks like) to be American. 
 

Author Bio

Hayes Peter Mauro is an associate professor of art and design at CUNY’s Queensborough Community College. He is the author of The Art of Americanization at the Carlisle Indian School.
 

Praise

“With numerous illustrations Messianic Fulfillments offers an important contribution to art history with interpretations of paintings and images of Native peoples and other ‘subaltern groups.’ It examines the vicissitudes of ideas and artistic renderings about race from colonial America to the present as presented in the epilogue. Mauro’s writing style will engage general readers, undergraduates, and more advanced scholars alike.”—Julius H. Rubin, professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Saint Joseph

“The subject of how evangelical notions of ‘Otherness,’ race, American national identity, and evangelical Christianity are woven throughout American culture and history, and how visual representations of these notions are deployed to further their wider cultural adoption, is very important, especially so given the current political climate. Messianic Fulfillments makes a substantial contribution to the fields of race, religion, and American history and studies and also contributes to work in visual and material religious culture.”—Jennifer Snead, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Puritanism and Fidelity
2. Quakerism, Skulls, and Sanctity
3. Mormonism, Light and Dark
4. The Social Gospel, Christ’s Kingdom on Earth
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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