Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634

This article explores ruptures of colonial representation in the 1634 contribution of Paul Le Jeune to the Jesuit Relations , particularly in regard to Le Jeune’s intense antipathy to the faith Native Americans placed in dreams and dream interpretation. Native peoples had highly ritualized framework...

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Published in:Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Main Author: Lopenzina, Drew
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Project MUSE 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/eam.2015.0008
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spelling crjohnshopkinsun:10.1353/eam.2015.0008 2024-03-03T08:46:32+00:00 Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634 Lopenzina, Drew 2015 http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/eam.2015.0008 en eng Project MUSE Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal volume 13, issue 1, page 3-37 ISSN 1559-0895 Literature and Literary Theory Music Philosophy Religious studies Visual Arts and Performing Arts History Cultural Studies journal-article 2015 crjohnshopkinsun https://doi.org/10.1353/eam.2015.0008 2024-02-03T23:20:36Z This article explores ruptures of colonial representation in the 1634 contribution of Paul Le Jeune to the Jesuit Relations , particularly in regard to Le Jeune’s intense antipathy to the faith Native Americans placed in dreams and dream interpretation. Native peoples had highly ritualized frameworks for interpreting dreams that stood in stark opposition to the expressed evangelical agendas of the Jesuits. The Montagnais, with whom Le Jeune wintered in 1633–34, used dreams to speak to manitous, who would assist them in finding game and other endeavors. Dreaming itself, with its claims to prophetic vision, was a phenomenon that threatened to override doctrinaire stances. It had the power to erase familiar boundary lines of identity and culture, to express desires either unwelcome or unthinkable, and to force traumatic memories back into the forefront of one’s consciousness. Although the Jesuit order in New France labored to bring Native faith in dreams under colonial control, Le Jeune’s Relation reveals the inherent strains of imposing a dominant discourse of containment on an indigenous framework of engagement—strains that make themselves apparent in Le Jeune’s foray into liminality and his own dream of moose. Article in Journal/Newspaper montagnais Johns Hopkins University Press Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 13 1 3 37
institution Open Polar
collection Johns Hopkins University Press
op_collection_id crjohnshopkinsun
language English
topic Literature and Literary Theory
Music
Philosophy
Religious studies
Visual Arts and Performing Arts
History
Cultural Studies
spellingShingle Literature and Literary Theory
Music
Philosophy
Religious studies
Visual Arts and Performing Arts
History
Cultural Studies
Lopenzina, Drew
Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634
topic_facet Literature and Literary Theory
Music
Philosophy
Religious studies
Visual Arts and Performing Arts
History
Cultural Studies
description This article explores ruptures of colonial representation in the 1634 contribution of Paul Le Jeune to the Jesuit Relations , particularly in regard to Le Jeune’s intense antipathy to the faith Native Americans placed in dreams and dream interpretation. Native peoples had highly ritualized frameworks for interpreting dreams that stood in stark opposition to the expressed evangelical agendas of the Jesuits. The Montagnais, with whom Le Jeune wintered in 1633–34, used dreams to speak to manitous, who would assist them in finding game and other endeavors. Dreaming itself, with its claims to prophetic vision, was a phenomenon that threatened to override doctrinaire stances. It had the power to erase familiar boundary lines of identity and culture, to express desires either unwelcome or unthinkable, and to force traumatic memories back into the forefront of one’s consciousness. Although the Jesuit order in New France labored to bring Native faith in dreams under colonial control, Le Jeune’s Relation reveals the inherent strains of imposing a dominant discourse of containment on an indigenous framework of engagement—strains that make themselves apparent in Le Jeune’s foray into liminality and his own dream of moose.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lopenzina, Drew
author_facet Lopenzina, Drew
author_sort Lopenzina, Drew
title Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634
title_short Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634
title_full Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634
title_fullStr Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634
title_full_unstemmed Le Jeune Dreams of Moose: Altered States among the Montagnais in the Jesuit Relations of 1634
title_sort le jeune dreams of moose: altered states among the montagnais in the jesuit relations of 1634
publisher Project MUSE
publishDate 2015
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/eam.2015.0008
genre montagnais
genre_facet montagnais
op_source Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
volume 13, issue 1, page 3-37
ISSN 1559-0895
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1353/eam.2015.0008
container_title Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal
container_volume 13
container_issue 1
container_start_page 3
op_container_end_page 37
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