Degree Year
1939
Document Type
Thesis - Open Access
Degree Name
Master of Arts (MA)
Department
History
Keywords
19th century, Cherokee, Georgia, United States, Indian, Tribal, Sovereignty
Abstract
The artificial air of the Nineteenth Century was filled with such pious asininities as "the white man's burden" and "saving the heathen form hell". To our cynical generation this jargon of concealed desires seems the ultimate in hypocrisy but it should be remembered that such an attitude was not an isolated phenomenon; it was merely one of the high points in an imperialism which is as old as modern civilization.
Conquest is almost synonymous with man who, motivated by the conflict between inertia and the necessity of existence, will whenever possible force some weaker people to do his work and take their possessions. However, since the conqueror may be threatened by a later comer he usually cloaks his economic motives with sanctimonious expressions of morality and justice. The capacity of the human mind to fool itself is infinite.
Repository Citation
Ottinger, Paul, "The Decline of Indian Tribal Sovereignty in the Nineteenth Century" (1939). Honors Papers. 800.
https://digitalcommons.oberlin.edu/honors/800