sus
Moderator
OK picking up where I left off:
Wyld sees Chief Tecumseh of the Shawnee as a kind of revolutionary poet, a prophet, a Muhammed: unifying a people with his divine vision of alterity—winning them over to his imaginal. Founding a new family.
He cites a memo from William Henry Harrison, when he was governor of Indian Territory:
This is a pretty hagiographic account of Morrison, as revolutionary prophet, but if you buy it, then the Establishment is perfectly right to lock him up, the FBI is perfectly right to have a file.
Wyld sees Chief Tecumseh of the Shawnee as a kind of revolutionary poet, a prophet, a Muhammed: unifying a people with his divine vision of alterity—winning them over to his imaginal. Founding a new family.


He cites a memo from William Henry Harrison, when he was governor of Indian Territory:
bespeaks him one of those uncommon geniuses which spring up occasionally to produce revolutions and overturn the established order of things
This is a pretty hagiographic account of Morrison, as revolutionary prophet, but if you buy it, then the Establishment is perfectly right to lock him up, the FBI is perfectly right to have a file.