hmm. so you are saying that the concept of the Noble Savage is being mentioned here solely in it's relation to environmentalism?
ok that makes sense, and it makes all of what you said make sense in that regard - if the concept of the Noble Savage was SOLELY relative to environmentalism then i agree that new facts are increasingly suggesting that they wern't that great in that regard:
i have heard the recent backlash against aboriginal people in this regard - locally in australia i'm hearing a gradually louder voice saying
"the aboriginals whiped out countless species over their history in australia" and also bringing attention to the fact that they too immigrated here themselves - just a hell of a long time ago.
however my concept of the Noble Savage isn't limited to environmentalism, it's strongly linked with religion. and this is where i believe the real power behind the Noble Savage concept comes from.
WarAdvocat wrote:Specifically what that phrase means is that the so-called "Noble Savage" is a highly romanticized fiction created by upper-class Euro-centric cultures about aboriginal, indigenous & etc. people in a LITERARY movement, not to counter some stigma...
i believe that the literary concept of the Noble Savage mirrored the change in contemporary thinking at the time - that foreign cultural concepts of spirituality were being introduced into the contemporary culture and actually being recognised for their worth, overcomming the previous religious stigma that wrote all tribal religion off as "the religion of lesser humans". So i DO think it was created to counter the previous stigma.
Contemporary literature of the time mirrors paradigm changes. In much the same way as there has been such an influx of homosexual themes in mainstream contemporary film within the last few decades - it mirrors paradigm changes in the culture and DOES counter previous stigma as it encourages all to adopt the new paradigm.
WarAdvocat wrote:...It carries with it the pre-supposition that these peoples are somehow better than the so-called civilized nations, living in some sort of "state of grace". In modern times, the paradigm of the Noble Savage has come to encompass some sort of freedom from the "Original Sin" of activity which is detrimental to their environment.
On an environmental standpoint i see your point. But on a spiritual standpoint i think dismissal of the Noble Savage concept is arrogent, spiritually nieve, and culturally elitist.
it'd depend on your values. i value metaphysics, spirituality, psychology and the links between them. and i take exception to the ignorance of these concepts when discussing the Noble Savage.