|
Official Versions: Governments,
Institutions, and American Visions
Just
because the government said it was true...
Remember:
Agronomist Cyrus Thomas, official with the United States Geological
Survey in the early 1870s, reporting that "The Americans bring
the rains with them" to the arid regions of the West.
Similarly,
official brochures, works of historical sobriety, park-service pamphlets,
and all the rest of the myriad materials put out by a benevolent
government for the benefit of its citizenry and sundry tourists
(and teachers!) from around the globe, may be at least as interesting
as documents of evidence than as repositories of evidence-- as culturally
inflected, significant.
Consider, for example, the
middle, front and back of the New Mexico official state map, handed
out free at every tourist rest area and tourist guest services bureau.
While at first the map may seem a boon to travelers planning a trip
or in their cars looking for the best route to their destination,
the front and back suggest something more-- promotion, but also
inflection: directed information, directed not just by the imagined
needs of users, but by the politically lobbied needs of various
constituencies withinthe state-- Native American tribes,
Hispano landowners and citizens, businessmen and members of the
Chambers of Commerce of specific cities. Why, after all, does Alamogordo
get a city map, while other towns don't?
And there's the matter of
the colors, and the topographical representations, of the real map.
If you're in a car, you don't necessarily want to be distracted
by that. But if you're at home, imagining a picturesque vacation,
mountains are a must.

|