Territorializing Whiteness

An Archaeology of Boy Scout Simulations

Authors

  • Craig N Cipolla Tufts University
  • James Quinn Mohegan Tribal Historic Preservation Office and Archaeology Department
  • Jay Levy Mohegan Tribal Historic Preservation Office and Archaeology Department

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jca.21077

Keywords:

Boy Scouts of America, Contemporary Archaeology, Colonialism, Indigenous History, Appropriation, Simulation

Abstract

This paper provides an archaeological perspective on the Boy Scouts of America, placing special emphasis on Scout camps occupying Mohegan lands in southeastern Connecticut (USA) and focusing on the alteration of Indigenous and Indigenous-colonial sites. Archaeological traces demonstrate how Scouts modified a range of stone features, both ancient and recent, and how they reorganized and redefined the land by naming and bounding their camps. Considering these patterns alongside Scout material culture, including the archaeological remains of Scout habitations, we discuss Boy Scout simulations of Indigenous and Indigenous-colonial histories. Drawing upon Indigenous knowledge and critique, we explore how Boy Scout camps “territorialize” whiteness. This involves the appropriation of Indigeneity as a means of escaping the trappings of late capitalist society, the misrepresentation of Indigenous history via well-worn tropes of unilineal evolution (where things always progress from simple to complex) and the denial of colonial plurality and of continued Indigenous presence on the land.

Author Biographies

  • Craig N Cipolla, Tufts University

    Craig N. Cipolla is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Tufts University. Since 2010, he has worked collaboratively with the Mohegan Tribe.

  • James Quinn, Mohegan Tribal Historic Preservation Office and Archaeology Department

    James Quinn is the Mohegan Tribal Historic Preservation Officer and Archaeology Program Manager. He is a tribal member and has worked in the tribe’s archaeology program for over a decade.

  • Jay Levy, Mohegan Tribal Historic Preservation Office and Archaeology Department

    Jay Levy is the Archaeology Field Supervisor for the Mohegan Tribal Historic Preservation Office. He has worked for the Mohegan Tribe for over 20 years.

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Published

2022-05-13

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Cipolla, C. N., Quinn, J., & Levy, J. . (2022). Territorializing Whiteness: An Archaeology of Boy Scout Simulations. Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, 8(2), 185–206. https://doi.org/10.1558/jca.21077