Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy

In a dialogue between the material and the textual, can objects speak over texts? This project examines nine devotional wampum belts produced as cross-cultural mediators between Catholic ecclesiastics and Indigenous people in northeastern North America between the seventeenth and nineteenth centurie...

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Main Author: Puyo, Lise
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: ScholarlyCommons 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI29255774
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spelling ftunivpenn:oai:repository.upenn.edu:dissertations-18588 2023-05-15T12:58:55+02:00 Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy Puyo, Lise 2022-01-01T08:00:00Z https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI29255774 ENG eng ScholarlyCommons https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI29255774 Dissertations available from ProQuest Cultural anthropology|History|Religion text 2022 ftunivpenn 2022-10-22T22:23:14Z In a dialogue between the material and the textual, can objects speak over texts? This project examines nine devotional wampum belts produced as cross-cultural mediators between Catholic ecclesiastics and Indigenous people in northeastern North America between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries. Following Haudenosaunee, Huron-Wendat, Abenaki, and Anishinaabe epistemologies, wampum belts have been considered as both symbols of Native American and First Nations sovereignty, and as non-human beings doted with agency and willpower. When Indigenous Christians sent wampum belts to religious communities in France, Belgium, and Italy, these objects embodied diplomatic requests presented to Christian saints worshipped at these sites. Did these wampum belts function as independent diplomatic agents, without the presence of Indigenous interpreters? If so, what were these belts meant to do? I suggest that there may be heretofore unexamined messages, embedded in the material and documentary record, that reveal the agency and potency of these objects. Closer engagements with wampum materiality can offer insights that are missing from earlier historical studies of missionary-Indigenous relations. To discern this, I examined construction techniques that may reveal Indigenous makers’ agency in articulating political demands. I conducted archival research and re-examined historical translations, while consulting with the Indigenous communities in Canada who created these wampum belts, to assess how wampum messaging impacts the consciousness of humans around it. These diverse sources illuminate the transfers of agency that take place during wampum diplomacy, showing the embodied innovations and continuities that allowed these materials to "speak" across space and time. These wampum belts constitute an alternative archive of both Indigenous and missionary strategies. The objects and associated papers show savvy Indigenization of Catholic stories and practices to secure new alliances and territories, at the same time that ... Text abenaki anishina* First Nations University of Pennsylvania: ScholaryCommons@Penn Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Pennsylvania: ScholaryCommons@Penn
op_collection_id ftunivpenn
language English
topic Cultural anthropology|History|Religion
spellingShingle Cultural anthropology|History|Religion
Puyo, Lise
Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy
topic_facet Cultural anthropology|History|Religion
description In a dialogue between the material and the textual, can objects speak over texts? This project examines nine devotional wampum belts produced as cross-cultural mediators between Catholic ecclesiastics and Indigenous people in northeastern North America between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries. Following Haudenosaunee, Huron-Wendat, Abenaki, and Anishinaabe epistemologies, wampum belts have been considered as both symbols of Native American and First Nations sovereignty, and as non-human beings doted with agency and willpower. When Indigenous Christians sent wampum belts to religious communities in France, Belgium, and Italy, these objects embodied diplomatic requests presented to Christian saints worshipped at these sites. Did these wampum belts function as independent diplomatic agents, without the presence of Indigenous interpreters? If so, what were these belts meant to do? I suggest that there may be heretofore unexamined messages, embedded in the material and documentary record, that reveal the agency and potency of these objects. Closer engagements with wampum materiality can offer insights that are missing from earlier historical studies of missionary-Indigenous relations. To discern this, I examined construction techniques that may reveal Indigenous makers’ agency in articulating political demands. I conducted archival research and re-examined historical translations, while consulting with the Indigenous communities in Canada who created these wampum belts, to assess how wampum messaging impacts the consciousness of humans around it. These diverse sources illuminate the transfers of agency that take place during wampum diplomacy, showing the embodied innovations and continuities that allowed these materials to "speak" across space and time. These wampum belts constitute an alternative archive of both Indigenous and missionary strategies. The objects and associated papers show savvy Indigenization of Catholic stories and practices to secure new alliances and territories, at the same time that ...
format Text
author Puyo, Lise
author_facet Puyo, Lise
author_sort Puyo, Lise
title Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy
title_short Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy
title_full Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy
title_fullStr Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy
title_full_unstemmed Negotiating Between Shell and Paper: Wampum Belts as Agents of Religious Diplomacy
title_sort negotiating between shell and paper: wampum belts as agents of religious diplomacy
publisher ScholarlyCommons
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI29255774
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre abenaki
anishina*
First Nations
genre_facet abenaki
anishina*
First Nations
op_source Dissertations available from ProQuest
op_relation https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI29255774
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