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Eaten up by stereotypes
Christopher Columbus' stereotypes of Caribbean natives have been used
by some of history's greatest writers and philosophers, says Dr.
Philip Boucher, a history professor.
Boucher's new book, "Cannibal Encounters: Europeans and Island Caribs
1492-1763," says Columbus' description of Caribbean island people as
"ferocious cannibals" influenced the work of William Shakespeare,
Thomas Hobbes, John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Columbus influenced the anthropological views of writers who have
influenced modern thought, Boucher said. "A majority of writers
participated in this degradation of American Indians. There was not in
fact such a huge gap between 'primitive' and 'civilized.' These were
distortions perpetuated by Columbus and most of his successors."
The belief that some people of faraway places were cannibals was
accepted by Europeans long before they arrived in the New World. But
cannibalism has never been proven to have existed among the islanders
Columbus encountered.
Columbus and other Europeans had selfish reasons for spreading the
message of cannibalism: It allowed colonists to enslave the islanders,
an economic boon.
After meeting enslaved islanders, Queen Isabella ordered the slaves
released. Before her death, however, she relented and allowed the
enslavement of "cannibals." Spaniards used the loophole to enslave
almost any Indian within their grasp.