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Christopher Columbus: Hero Or Villain. ... Christopher Columbus did not do a single
good deed in any of his four voyages in the late 1400's. ...
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Christopher Columbus. Christopher Columbus My mini-report is on Christopher Columbus
(1451-1506). ... Christopher Columbus started his voyages at a very young age. ...
Christopher Columbus. ... But who is Christopher Columbus and how valiant were his
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If Christopher Columbus Returned To The ‘New World' In The Year 2000. ... Many states
have statues of Christopher Columbus centered within their cities. ...
Submitted by cwcotterman on May 13, 2008
Category: American History
Words: 1915 | Pages: 8
Views: 71
Popularity Rank: 106,950
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America's national memory is filled with icons and symbols, avatars of deeply held, yet imperfectly understood, beliefs. The role of history in the iconography of the United States is pervasive, yet the facts behind the fiction are somehow lost in an amorphous haze of patriotism and perceived national identity. Christopher Columbus, as a hero and symbol of the first order in America, is an important figure in this pantheon of American myth. His status, not unlike most American icons, is representative not of his own accomplishments, but the self-perception of the society which raised him to his pedestal in the American gallery of heroism.
This gallery was not in place at the birth of the political nation. America, as a young republic, found itself immediately in the middle of an identity crisis. Having effected a violent separation from England and its cultural and political icons, America was left without history--or heroes. Michael Kammen, in his Mystic Chords of Memory explains that "repudiation of the past left Americans of the young republic without a firm foundation on which to base a shared sense of their social selves." (65) A new national story was needed, yet the Revolutionary leaders, obvious choices for mythical transformation, were loath to be raised to their pedestals. "Even though every nation needs a mythic explanation of its own creation, that process was paradoxically elaborated by the reluctance of Revolutionary statesmen to have their story told prematurely." (Kammen, 27) To be raised above others would be undemocratic, they believed. The human need to explain origins, to create self-identity through national identity, was thwarted by this reluctance. A vacuum was created, and was slowly filled with the image of Christopher Columbus.
"The association between Columbus and America took root in the imagination" in the eighteenth century. "People had even more reason to think of themselves in distinctive American terms." (Noble,...
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