- Tue Nov 16, 2021 7:17 pm
#92115
As I read it, ltowns1, our author thinks the Pan-Indianism theory is too simplistic, but not completely wrong. As is common in many RC passages, the author offers some qualified support for a theory that they simultaneously reject. For example, our author acknowledges that intertribalism has been increasing. At the end of the second paragraph, rather than completely rejecting the theory, the author says that something "more complex" is taking place. In the fourth paragraph the author concedes that "intertribal activities are a major facet of native American culture today," which can be seen as an indication that at least some aspects of Pan-Indianism are accurate, if overly simple. And in the final paragraph the author tells us that intertribal activities do play a role in protecting native American identify in a more general sense, even while tribal identities and cultures remain distinct.
To me, all of this adds up to less than an outright rejection and more along the lines of "it's not that simple." Skepticism is, in my view, the perfect word to describe that view.
And going back to answer B for a moment, that answer cannot be correct because the Pan-Indianism theory does NOT have a negative view of cultural borrowing! It's the author who has those negative views about the theory, rather than the theory having negative views. Those sociologists who support the theory seem to see it in a very matter-of-fact way, as in "this is what is happening," rather than "this is a bad thing." So answer B is describing something that did not occur within the text, and thus must be rejected.
Adam M. Tyson
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