OriginsFrom the end of the fifteenth century certain European states began expanding overseas, initially in Africa, later in Asia and in the Americas. In general, they sought mineral resources (such as silver and gold), land (for the cultivation of export crops such as rice and sugar, and the cultivation of other foodstuffs to support mining communities) and labor (to work in mines and plantations). In some cases, colonizers killed the indigenous people. In other cases, the people became incorporated into the expanding states to serve as labor. Although some Europeans recognized these people to be human beings, once the debate on whether they had souls had been settled, some had no plans to treat these social and economic— and, it was often assumed intellectual— inferiors as equals. In part through this and similar processes, some Europeans developed a notion of "the primitive" and "the savage" that legitimized genocide and ethnocide on the one hand, and some European domination on the other. This discourse extended to people of Africa, Asia, and Oceania as some European colonialism, neo-colonialism, and imperialism expanded. The idea of the "noble savage" may have served, in part, as an attempt to re-establish the value of indigenous lifestyles and illegitimatize imperial excesses - establishing exotic humans as somewhat morally superior in order to counter-balance the perceived political and economic inferiorities. The attributes of the "noble savage" often included:
In the first century CE, all of these features of the eighteenth century Noble Savage had been attributed by Tacitus to Germans in his Germania, in which he contrasted them repeatedly with the softened, romanised, corrupted Gauls— and by inference criticised his own Roman culture in unspoken contrasts. CriticismIn the 20th century, the concept of the Noble Savage came to be seen as unrealistic and condescending. Insofar as it was based on certain stereotypes, it came to be considered a form of patronizing racism, even when it replaced the previous stereotype of the bloodthirsty savage. It has been criticized by many, for example Roger Sandall, in academic, anthropological, sociological and religious fields. For instance, some Christians, especially those who believe in the doctrine of original sin, consider mankind to be universally degenerate and sinful at heart, regardless of whatever people group or civilization they are associated with. Stanley Kubrick, whose films make strong comments on human nature, rejects the idea of the noble savage:
As a form of racism, the ideology of the noble savage has been criticized heavily by anthropologists who acknowledge that it is a false construct based on European notions of what the "Indian" is like. Anthropologist Lawrence H. Keeley has used ethnographic evidence from Highland New Guinea tribesman, Kalahari San peoples, and other existing "primitive" tribes, combined with anthropological evidence from around the world, to demonstrate the level of violence inherent in these societies. Amongst his aims is to demonstrate the falseness of the myth that "civilized humans have fallen from grace, from a simple primeval happiness, a peaceful golden age." [1]. The author laments the role that the "noble savage" paradigm has had in warping much anthropological literature to political ends. Historically, and in the present, the idea of the noble savage has been used by various parties to create impossible double standards and thus deny indigenous groups their legitimate claims. LiteratureThe noble savage as protagonist or, more often, as companion to the protagonist has long been a popular type of literary character. Perhaps the most notable early example is the character Friday from Robinson Crusoe (1719) by Daniel Defoe. Other examples include Dirk Peters from Edgar Allan Poe's The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (1838), The Noble Savage from Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass, Chingachgook and Uncas from James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales (1823 and later), Queequeg from Herman Melville's Moby-Dick (1851), Umslpoagaas from H. Rider Haggard's Allan Quatermain (1885), and Winnetou from Karl May´s Winnetou novels (1893 and later). Tonto from the Lone Ranger radio and television programs is one of the best known examples from the 20th century. Twentieth-century popular culture has also expressed its inherited views of the "noble savage" by placing them in fantasy or science fiction settings. Historical fantasy examples include the figures such as "Tarzan". The very meaning of "barbarian" in contemporary popular culture has become sympathetically colored through similar fantasies. As sensitivity to racist stereotypes has increased, science fiction has often cast space aliens in the role of the noble savage. Twentieth-century readers recast as "noble savages" some literary creatures like Caliban in Shakespeare's The Tempest or Dr. Frankenstein's creature in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) Another noble savage archetype appears in the person of the Siberian Nanai hunter Dersu Uzala, who became the main character of the book Dersu Uzala by the Russian explorer Vladimir Arsenyev. It has inspired two movie pictures, the 1961 Soviet film Dersu Uzala by Agasi Babayan (Агаси Бабаян), as well as the 1975 Soviet-Japanese film Dersu Uzala by Akira Kurosawa (黒澤 明). In 1964, the Australian writer Mary Durack published a fictionalised account of Yagan, an Indigenous Australian warrior who played a key part in early resistance to British settlement around Perth, Western Australia, in her children's novel The Courteous Savage: Yagan of the Swan River. When re-issued in 1976, it was renamed Yagan of the Bibbulmun because the word "Savage" was considered racist. The 1980 film The Gods Must Be Crazy by Jamie Uys depicts a group of Bushmen from the Kalahari desert as noble savages. The schizophrenic Columbian Indian "Chief" Bromden in Ken Kesey's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" was considered by critics to explode the conventions of the noble savage.citation needed See also
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