Wilder - 10. “It can never be a long time ago.”
Episode Date: August 31, 2023As we talked about in our very first episode, the last line of Big Woods reads, “Now is now, it can never be a long time ago.” That line might be the most accurate description there is of the Litt...le House series. Little House on the Prairie might be about another time, but Laura’s stories are very much alive in our time. We can't seem to let her go. But of course, some of the ways in which Laura is relevant are painful to consider. The story she tells is narrow, contributing to a long held mythology of the American West that prioritizes white narratives. For a final look at Laura’s impact, Glynnis and Wilder producer Emily drive further west, beyond Laura’s homesteads, to understand what we’re missing when we hold on too tightly to one narrative. Could it be time to let Laura go? Go deeper: More on Mount Rushmore and the Black HillsMore on the Gordon Stockade More on the Battle of the Little BighornMore on Buffalo Calf Road WomanMore on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Follow us for behind the scenes content! @WilderPodcast on TikTok@Wilder_Podcast on InstagramSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This recording is being made in the Laura Ingalls Wilder Library of Mansfield, Missouri,
the home of Mrs. Wilder.
In 1953, 19 years after the first little housebook was released, librarians in California
sent Laura Ingalls Wilder a present for her 86th birthday.
They were homemade dolls of every member of the Ingalls family.
To thank the librarians, Laura recorded a response in the Mansfield, Missouri Library.
I certainly do appreciate the gift of these clank little figures
that seemed to have walked out of my memories of Loneville.
This is the only known recording of Laura's voice.
But more than all, I value the understanding and love for me and my family that prompted the gift.
Little House and the Big Woods, the first book in the Little House on the Perry series,
was published 90 years ago this year.
As we talked about in our very first episode,
the last line of Big Woods reads,
now is now, it can never be a long time ago.
That line might be the most accurate description
there is of the Little House series.
The books still sell millions of copies.
The television show still airs around the world.
Little House and the Perry might be about another time.
But Laura's stories are very much alive in our time.
We can't seem to let her go.
What is Laura still around?
She's just, she's really honestly
going to sound like a ridiculous answer.
But why is a cup of tea still around?
It's she so cozy.
A century and a half after a girl was born
and a little log cabin in the big woods of Wisconsin,
her stories continue
to hold some timeless truths.
There's a rich family in town at the store who give them a hard time and there's always
a crop failure or blizzard or locusts and they cling together and make it through.
I think it's it's that these are the problems that people really deal with.
Laura is still relevant, although often in ways that can be painful to consider.
Many of the issues that Wildred raises in the Little House
works, our issues that are still with us today.
And in that sense, her work is more relevant than ever.
We started this podcast in order to have an honest look at the woman behind the books.
And what we discovered is that there
is a lot more behind Laura than the simple heartwarming
tale of a 65-year-old farmwife deciding
to sit down and write about her life.
There is mind-blowing poverty, relentless hardship,
a father who made a lot of questionable decisions.
An extremely complicated, some might say, backstabbing daughter.
An authorship conspiracy that won't quite die.
A Hollywood star with shiny hair, a perfect jawline, and glistening abs.
A lot of violent racism.
And the funding of some extreme political figures, and an army
of fans that has fueled an entire international tourism industry.
But where does that leave us?
And where does that leave me?
A person who has loved Laura so deeply for so long, I went into this project not knowing
where our investigation would take us and not knowing how I would feel on the other side.
And now we're here and what I feel is complicated.
And I'm also shocked at the things that ended up upsetting me the most while making this show.
What if doing this episode makes me never read Little House again?
What I do know is I don't love Laura Ingalls while journey less.
But I think about her and myself very differently than I did a year ago.
You know what they say about truly loving something.
Sometimes you have to let it go.
I'm Glynnis McNichol,
and this is the final episode of Wilder. 1 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 We're going to start by going right back to where this entire project began.
On the road.
Oh, that's you can see beginning of the badlands right over there.
Wow.
Last summer, when we were driving around the Midwest,
visiting the Laura Ingalls houses,
we didn't end our trip at Desmet South Dakota.
Unlike the Ingalls family, Emily and I
kept moving west.
There are two sides to the state of South Dakota. The eastern side where the
Ingalls lived is largely farmland, but once you cross the Missouri River, things open up.
You pass through a number of Native American reservations, including the Pine Ridge reservation,
one of the largest in the United States, and Buffalo Gap National Grassland. A little further is the Badlands National Park, and beyond that, the Black Hills.
So that seems like the start of the real, like, western landscape I've been imagining.
The idea of the American West is at the heart of the idea of America.
And despite never moving beyond the actual Midwest, Little House is very much a part of that
narrative.
Part of the reason we came out on the road was to try and walk in Laura's shoes and see
at least some of what she saw.
But we also came out here to get a better sense of the role
Laura plays in our understanding of this history. As we drove further west it
became more apparent to us how Laura is connected to American myth-making and
the sometimes violent prioritizing of the white experience.
If you drive into the heart of the black hills and follow the many many signs Wow, I see it, there you go.
If you drive into the heart of the black hills and follow the many, many signs pointing
the way, you will eventually come upon Mount Rushmore.
Mount Rushmore is an iconic American image.
Carved into granite, it's shorthand for the permanence of the American idea of democracy,
a tribute to its own greatness, a mascot for America, if you will.
It's also carved into an extremely sacred place for Native Americans.
And while we all know what Mount Rushmore looks like, to encounter it in the midst of the lush landscape
of the Black Hills underscores both its absurdity
and the violation of Native American land
by the US government.
There's no reason for that to be there.
There's no reason.
Other than, hey, we're here now.
So fuck you to everyone who was here before.
In 1868 with the signing of the Fort Laramie Treaty,
the US government agreed that the Black Hills
would remain exclusively native land.
But once gold was found in the hills a few years later,
the US broke the treaty and white settlers flooded the area.
By the 1920s, the Black Hills was a tourist destination for many.
To further capitalize on this, the faces of four American presidents were carved in
the face of a granite formation known to the Lakota people as Six Grand Fathers Mountain.
When the monument was finished, this cliff was renamed Mount Rushmore.
In 1980, the US Supreme Court ruled
that the US had unlawfully taken control of the Black Hills
and offered more than $100 million to the Sue Nation.
But the Sue refused the money.
To this day, they rejected and insist they want their land back.
A little bit more, I mean, look at this side
without the precedence.
Like, look at George Washington's profile up there.
It's just, here you go.
Get out.
George, look.
It's so...
It's so sterile also because you cut through...
And it's white compared to the red and everything.
You can just tell...
Wow.
It's kind of like a permanent billboard for America.
It's like you carved a billboard for America into the hills.
The Ingalls family have a direct connection
to the fate of the Black Hills.
Mount Rushmore was completed in 1941.
By this point, Laura's younger sister, Carrie,
was married to a man named David N. Swansea,
who was known as the person who named Mount Rushmore.
And Carrie's stepson Harold, helped carve it.
But Laura's connections to the Black Hills
goes back even further than that
to something called the Gordon Stockade.
Oh, because you're seeing Parkment.
Yes.
That's the Stockade right there.
Oh, oh my God.
Your destination is on the right.
Yep.
I don't know if I have to park, which is the right.
The Gordon Party was a private expedition that illegally ventured into the black hills
in 1874, looking for gold.
The reason they did so is because a few months earlier, Lieutenant Colonel George Custer
had been sent there to scout a good spot for a military post and reported back that there
was lots of gold.
The Gordon Party set out shortly thereafter,
and once they reached their destination in October 1874,
built a stockade and settled in for the winter.
Hardcore Little House fans will recognize
the Gordon's stockade from the book,
These Happy Golden Years,
when Laura's Uncle Tom visits the Ingles family in Dismet.
And the chapter titled titled Springtime,
Laura comes home and finds a vaguely familiar man
at the table.
That man is Tom Quiner, Ma's youngest brother,
who Laura hasn't seen since she was a child.
Uncle Tom tells the family of his experience
as a member of the Gordon party,
when he was one of the, quote,
first white men that ever laid eyes on the black hills.
After surviving the winter, the Gordon Party was forcefully removed by the US cavalry
for illegally settling on native land.
And when Uncle Tom gets to this part of the story, it gets a big reaction out of Pa.
Pa was walking back and forth across the room.
I'll be durned if I could have taken it, he exclaimed,
not without some kind of scrap.
We couldn't fight the whole United States Army Uncle Tom said sensibly,
but I did hate to see that stockade go up and smoke.
I know Ma said,
to this day, I think of the house we had to leave an Indian territory,
just when Charles got glass windows
into it.
As a kid, pause anger in this scene is the only thing that stood out to me in a chapter
that I was otherwise bored by.
But as Ma points out, pause anger mirrors the outrage that the angles felt at being removed
from Indian territory.
The lesson in both these instances seems to be
that white people have a right to land simply because they want it.
And in the black hills, the history of this prioritization of white men
and the decimation of native peoples land was impossible to miss.
impossible to miss. After leaving the Black Hills, Emily and I continued on 300 miles northwest to a spot that represents one of the most extreme versions of this erasure. The Little
Big Horn Battlefield National Monument in Southeastern Montana. little big horn battlefield three miles.
In June 1876, the seventh cavalry, led by Custer, was famously defeated by the Cheyenne, Lakota,
and Arapaho tribes led by Crazy Horse in sitting bull.
There are a lot of complicated reasons
that led to the battle of the little big horn,
including numerous treaties the government made about control of the Black Hills that were
not honored.
And we've included resources in the show notes for further reading on this.
Even though the Lakota and Cheyenne and Arapahoe triumphed over Custer in the Battle of Greece
以 grass, as it is known in Native American culture, it was, in many ways, the last stand
of Native American independence in the West.
In the aftermath of the battle,
most of the remaining Native American tribes
were violently pushed onto reservations.
Today, it's widely recognized
that Custer's decision to ignore orders
and go into battle was foolish and unnecessary.
And yet, despite this failure, which resulted in the decimation of the 7th Cavalry,
for many decades, Custer was still centered as the hero in this story.
Until 1991, the location of the battle was known as Custer Battlefield National Monument.
Here.
It means it's wild. You know, you're in a lot of comfort with the cool, Custer Battlefield National Monument.
Still named Custer. Yes, it's still glorified.
There's no way to spin this.
Like, it takes some amazing myth-making to make this seem heroic in any way.
Not even Rose Wilder Lane.
I mean, this is like Rose level of rewriting his
story. The gaslighten. Yeah. The little big corn battlefield national monument is located
on the Crow reservation. Every hour at the visitor center, one of the park rangers gives a talk.
There is also a bus tour of the site run by the Crow Agency.
The bus tour takes you right out into the fields where the battle took place, and looking
out over all the waving open grassland, it's not that hard to imagine yourself back in
1876. This is the only place in the whole world you'll get to see a reenactment on the actual battle site.
They have that every year on the anniversary, you just been certified couple of weekends.
We'll also have seven covering reenactors who will spend about two weeks, you know, living exactly the way that those soldiers would have.
Pretty interesting.
Afterward, Emily and I stopped at the Visitor's Center, hoping to catch one of the park rangers' talks.
Since we'd arrived, we'd only encountered older white male rangers.
But when we got to the talk, we met Ranger Tanya Gardner, who was not what we were expecting, in more ways than one.
The battles are a little bit more. Why did this battle take place?
What events led up about this battle.
She was going to tell us how this battle was just one episode in the centuries-long resistance of Native Americans against colonization.
This time with the 19800s, their legal documents being signed out here
land deals in the form of what we're called treaties between the people who are
here and the United States government. When we got back to New York, we couldn't stop thinking about Ranger Tanya's talk.
So we called her.
I'm Tanya, my maiden name is Plain Feather, and my maiden name is Gardner, and I'm married
to a Cheyenne.
I'm from Lodgecraft, Montana.
Are you the only park ranger who is local or who is Native American there?
There's a few that work there, but not like the seasonal
ranger. I'm the only one. And there's been like, I don't know how many countless
seasons right? I've been the only female. It had felt to both Emily and I when we
were at the site that Tanya was sold during the enormous responsibility of
giving context to an event that had been simplified
to almost cartoonish proportions in American history. A history that, like pause outrage
over being removed from quote, Indian territory, centered the white experience as the only
one of value. What had struck us most strongly about Tanya was that she'd immediately gone
to the origins of the myth-making behind
both Custer and America.
The events that led up to this battle, I always start with, didn't start in 1876.
We're going to go all the way back to 1492 Columbus, the Ocean Blue, and he discovers America. And all the misconceptions that we have there
with just that statement.
And not knowing and not having that right information
in our history books were the way that they hold them up
to this high, you know, he did all these great things
and he really didn't.
That's where the seat of that stuff.
I was curious whether Tonya received any sort of pushback when she did her talks.
She told us the response very much shifts depending on the age of the visitors,
and that younger age groups that have had access to more diverse cultural narratives
have a much different take.
It goes with different age groups, and I think that like people that are my age,
they come up and they're like, oh, this, yeah, this is a crop,
you know, this, I can't believe you can't really tell, you know,
what you really want to tell.
Older generations, on the other hand,
feel a much closer connection to Custer.
You have a lot of baby boomers.
And they're kind of like the last kind of old school,
I would call them, they're still in love with Custer.
There's a tremendous amount of people out there
that are Custer Buffs.
They think he was right and he was honorable,
but we have to think back to that time
when they didn't have all these different types of heroes.
So, you know, they look to the types of things like a war hero.
This idea of needing a hero is where
Custer overlapped directly with Laura for me. Tonya's observations reminded me of
something Dr. Debbie Reese had said when we talked to her. Part of what I was
realizing when I left our reservation in what your graduate school was how
ignorant people are about who native people are.
Dr. Debbie Reese is a scholar and educator who runs a website called American Indians
in Children's Literature.
And that became very clear at the University of Illinois because it had a mascot that was
quote unquote an Indian.
And when I got to Illinois and there was this mascot and people would
invite me to come to their civic organization or whatever it was. And they wanted me to dance
and they wanted me to story tell. And I'd say, well, I'm not a dancer. I don't dance that
way. We danced in a spiritual way at a certain time of the year in a certain place. And so
no, I won't dance. And they said, well, can can you tell stories and I said, no, I'm not a storyteller either.
I am a professor.
I want to be a professor.
Nobody wanted that.
They wanted someone to perform Indianness for them.
And I thought, what is going on?
These are in theory, very, very smart people in this area, but it was so it spoke to the
power of the mascot.
A mascot.
And how do we wield mascots?
Anyone who's been to a sports game knows it's with bluntness
and little space for anyone else.
The dictionary definition of a mascot is, quote,
a person, animal, or object that is believed to bring good luck,
or one that represents an organization.
A mascot is an image we rally behind
that represents a wave being, and one that gives this identity.
This idea of mascots was very much on our mind when Emily and I went to the
Laura Ingalls House in Mansfield, Missouri last September,
to attend wilder days.
Where much like the pageants,
people loved dressing up as Laura.
Plenty of girls in prairie outfits.
But there's a handful of men.
I would say, there are 50s and 60s wearing.
I think it's wearing suspenders and, yeah.
Of all the ways I'd considered Laura,
it was only after this conversation with Dr. Reese
and our trips out west and down south,
but I began to think of her as a mascot.
For many things, as a representative
of some sort of ideal,
a girl with enormous agency,
frontier woman who lived with and against nature, a
woman who had adventures and wrote them down.
She was an image I hoisted up as proof of identity, an evidence of what was possible.
I didn't put her on a t-shirt or a baseball cap, but I stapled a whole lot of yarn braids
to my hats. Laura as the mascot for the team I wanted to be on felt a lot closer to my own experience.
But to understand who I was willing to leave behind in order to be a member of this team,
what this mascot of Laura's pioneer girlhood erased was something I had to come to terms
with.
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I grew up completely obsessed with the little house books. It all starts with lore angles, right?
My little house books were Christmas gifts and
it'scribed to me by my mother.
I was six years old and I loved those books.
I still do.
Considering Laura under the guise of a mascot, felt like the missing piece in the larger
little house puzzle.
Mascots are created by organizations.
Many hands go into their making.
Part of the magic of the little house books, and one of the reasons people, including me,
have such passionate feelings about them, is because they are so successful at creating
intimacy.
We're not reading about Laura, we're living with Laura.
And yet, we know this is not the case.
The Little House books and their entire legacy
were very carefully crafted by Laura indefinitely by Rose,
then to a lesser extent by the book publishing industry.
Then they were crafted again by Hollywood.
Laura the writer may have just wanted to recount her life,
but Laura Ingalls the character
very intentionally represents something larger.
This raises an important question.
If Laura is a mascot for a certain team,
what are the other teams?
And who is representing them?
What stories about girls and women in this part
of the country?
Are we not telling?
A few years ago, I stumbled across a story
about the battle of the little big horn.
Included was an aside that the Cheyenne believed a Cheyenne
woman named Buffalo Calfroad woman may have been the person
who caused Custer's death.
This astounded me.
Why was this not a more well-known fact,
especially considering the cultural footprint of Custer?
I asked Tanya if she knew about Buffalo Cafferode woman.
It turns out Buffalo Cafferode woman
is quite famous in Shayan history.
She's also known for being part of the Battle of the Rosebud,
where she picks up her brother because the Cheyenne is called at the Battle of the Superbrother.
That's what they refer to the Battle of the Rosebud out.
The Battle of the Rosebud, or the Battle where the girl saved her brothers, the Cheyenne referred to it,
took place a week before the battle of the little big horn.
During the battle, when all hopes seemed to be lost for the Cheyenne, Buffalo Kaffred
woman went out onto the battlefield by herself to save her fallen brother.
This action rallied the Native American forces and they defeated the US cavalry led by George
Crook.
This is why the Cheyenne named the battle after her.
That's where I shine the light on her.
It's in the battle, the Rosemite.
Because they actually named it after her.
Whether or not it was Buffalo Calfroad woman
who was responsible for Custer's death,
maybe secondary to why we don't know who killed him.
The Cheyenne passed down their history orally,
not in written form.
But after the battle of the little big horn,
many participants went silent for fear of retribution.
It was only after a century of self-imposed silence
that the Cheyenne revealed Buffalo Cafferode woman's role
in the battle.
After the battle, the United States Army is going to spread notes about going after
anyone that's not on the reservation and then if they are on the reservation, they're
still going to come after you.
And anybody associated with the cluster battle, you know, and so let's call back then,
would be horribly persecuted.
So they didn't talk about it.
Nobody did.
The story of Buffalo Cafford woman has all the heroic elements of an epic American tale, far more than custer.
And yet, she remains nearly anonymous in mainstream culture.
Women not getting a fair shake from history is hardly new. One of the reasons so many of us, and I include myself here in the strongest terms,
Kling to Laura is that she is a strong female role model.
And for most of history, there have been very few of those.
The devotion so many of us feel towards Laura is not surprising, but it becomes a concern
when this sort of devotion takes up so much space that it doesn't leave room for other narratives.
I mean Emily, what is your take on how empty it is?
It's very empty.
We on the Wyoming side we were seeing ruins of branches or active branches and now there
is absolutely nothing.
This stretch of the country is notorious for modern day reasons, having nothing to do
with custer or the so-called Old West. In late 2019, the Crow tribe declared a state of emergency.
Tribal chairman AJ Nott afraid cited a list of issues including the failure to address the
murdered and missing women crisis. In a story published earlier this year, tied to a
docu-series called Murder and Big Horn about the epidemic.
The Guardian reported, quote,
Montana has one of the worst missing or murdered rates for Indigenous women in the country.
Driving back and forth on this road, I thought a lot about who is deemed worthy of a story.
And this led me to consider even more how the story of Laura is wielded.
What does Laura's appeal say about what we want to believe?
And who are we willing to leave out for that comfort?
Because to many people, Laura is very comforting.
She fulfills these basic traits that we need of, you know, hooting a baby to sleep or
reading somebody a book or just, you know, even though
nothing about the books that actually happens is comforting, that's Lizzie Skarnak, writer
and children's literature professor at NYU.
She's nothing comforting about like living in a mud hut.
She's able to make everything comforting and cozy,
and I think that is a fundamental desire
of human beings.
I have read the little house books hundreds of times.
When I was a kid, the worst part to the books
only flagged to me as evidence that Ma was invested
in Laura not enjoying herself.
Similar to how I sometimes felt about my own mother, and that Ba was exciting, which
was similar to how I felt about my own father as a child.
As a grown-up, I recognized the racism in the books.
And I also recognize that so many cultural things we loved growing up are very problematic.
This is something that came up on our road trip a lot.
On our second night in Mancado, after a long day of interviews, we decided to order room
service and camped out in front of the TV.
Much to our delight, a childhood favorite of Joe and mine was showing.
Sixteen candles, a sleepover staple that neither of us had actually seen in years.
It does not hold up.
To put it mildly.
But Joe especially had a strong reaction.
I mean, I'm like almost ready to start a petition to make sixteen candles, not be put on mildly. But Joe especially had a strong reaction. I mean, I'm like almost ready to start a position
to make 16 candles, not big put on the salad.
Wow, we need to put the mic out.
I know, this is how it can be.
Okay, we can just look at it.
What a 180, Joe.
I was so horrified by that movie.
I do not want, and I can actually see
different themes in my own life.
I was like, oh, all right, you know, whatever you get back out
of Trump and then I don't know what happens.
I don't think that movie should be on television anymore.
There is no getting around the fact that looking at some of the things
that made us who we are can be painful.
Even with all this knowledge, it remains impossible for me not to understand
Laura as a source of good in my own life. What she gave me in terms of
possibility, an example of how to be complicated, a girl who loves adventure and
clothes, who loves problematic sometimes damaging parents, and maybe most
importantly, how to be a writer. I was able to love these
things because the damaging part of the book didn't feel like they were doing
damage to me. And even if they were how much I loved the rest of it made up for
that. And then during the recording of the problem of Laura episode, I read out loud the parts
of the books that little house comes under fire for the most.
As I said the words out loud, I was shocked to discover that I actually felt physically
ill.
She says to Pa, quote, Pa, get me that little Indian baby.
I want it, I want it, she begged.
Oh.
What if doing this episode makes me never read Little House again?
My reading this out loud has actually been way more upsetting
to me than the reread.
And it was not easy for the producers in the room either. Pa, when I look at you
guy, we hear like this. Stressful to listen to this. There is, after all, a difference
between reading and saying, between sliding over the parts with your eyes that are our
problem and putting them out in the world with your own voice. And the saying out loud part was where it turns out
the buck stopped for me.
My God, this episode is really upsetting.
It's so much different to say it out loud.
Maybe that's the thing.
Everyone should be have to read these books out loud.
When I considered it, I realized I'd only
read the books to myself all these years.
That I had been able to internalize Laura without much mediation.
I immediately thought back to Dr. Reese and her belief that the little house books should
be taken out of children's classrooms.
Part of what was shocking to me as I tried to have conversations with people about the books is that I
had asked them to consider that sentence the only good Indian is a dead Indian
and I'd ask them to think about the impact that line has on that native child
in the classroom and ask them would you really do that you know would you really
do that and they say yes I mean really do that? And they say, yes.
I mean, without hesitation, it was yes,
because that's the way it was.
That's the way they thought back then.
And they had all kinds of rationalizations for that.
And none of the rationalizations
centered on the experience of that native child.
And that was really hard, because part of what I think
that we, as a society think, is that we send our kids
to teachers in schools.
I mean, we're giving them our children.
And we trust in some way that they are not
going to be hurt by their teachers
and what happens in their classrooms.
What I was left with was this question,
is the fact the little housebooks brought me,
Glyness, a lot of joy,
enough to justify the violence they had the power to inflict on others.
After the break, we're going to talk through how and where we think the little housebooks belong,
and also hear from listeners on whether they too are thinking about Laura
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What would you say to me that I struggled to let go
of my love for these books even as I recognized the harm that they do?
I would tell you, and this is something that I actually do in my workshops, is that I
share my own attachment to the five Chinese brothers.
You know, I can like smell that book when I say the title because it's one that I read
and what, you know, in first grade, I learned to read, this is one of the books I read.
I thought it was awesome.
But then when someone asked me to reconsider the book
and the images that they were in there,
I'm like, yeah, you're right.
And I own that and I admit that.
And so I talk about that and how it kind of steens,
it kind of hurts and you feel kind of stupid
because yeah, why didn't they see that before?
But it does take a conversation to be able to see something and start the journey of letting go of a particular book.
I decided the best people to have this conversation with were Jo and Emily, the two women who had come out on the road with me more than a year ago to try and figure out how I felt about Laura.
how I felt about Laura.
So, guys, we're at the end of the Wilder Podcast, which we started 18 months ago.
We have read all the books.
We've talked to all of the people.
We have driven around the country.
We've done hundreds of hours of interviews.
And so I thought this would be a really good
time for us all to sort of sit down in separate locations. And sort of talk through what we've
learned and if our thinking has changed, how does everyone feel? Well, Glenn, I think you are the first person that should answer that because when we started
this whole wild journey, you weren't sure exactly what you were going to find and whether
after you found whatever it was, you would still be able to love Laura in the same way.
And after all of this, after this journey of epic proportions,
literally literally, how do you feel now? I still, I have such deep love for Laura, the person,
like the individual writer who sat down and wrote it. But I think coming to terms with the fact that these books are not just a story
that came directly out of her head as she was experiencing it, and really understanding
that these books were a production of more than a few people.
Some of them very unlikable, and Laura has very unlikable parts of her.
And so I really sort of split my thinking
between the person and the product.
I really like what you just said
about splitting your feelings.
And I think that's a very modern way
of looking at creative production, at a brand.
I mean, that's what I think about a lot
when I think about celebrities
or when I think about influencers.
I'm like, all right, can I enjoy this movie
that has been made by a director who is terrible
in real life?
Can I enjoy Michael Jackson with my kids
knowing what I know about him as a human.
And so I think that this is a bigger thing
that so many of us grapple with art.
Can we enjoy art if we discover things
we don't like about the human being behind it
because all human beings are flawed in different ways.
Yeah, and the interesting thing in this case is,
I'm struggling less with Laura, the individual.
I recognize that she was complicated
and had a lot of problems,
but that's less difficult for me to accept
because that just feels like every human,
than her art, which I am struggling with.
And part of what's so complicated about that,
that we've talked about is her
art is so much about her. That speaks to something that has come up from a lot of listeners to
when we criticize Laura, which is she was a person of her moment. She was writing what she knew
at the time. And when I think about the individual, I can recognize there's some truth to that, although lots of
people in the 19th century knew that Indian removal was bad.
And we have to hold her to today's standards, because she exists as a relevant thing in
2023.
So I keep thinking of it like, you're allowed to look at an antique car and say, well, it
was built in 1923, but it doesn't mean it doesn't have to pass inspection
to be allowed on the road.
And I feel like what we've been doing with Laura is holding her up to 2023 inspection
to say, should you still be on the road, essentially, you know,
do you pass this inspection?
And if you don't, what do we do about that?
I am so aware of all the good she brought to my life, but
my life as a little white girl in suburban Toronto with highly educated parents and a wealth
of resources is not everyone's life. I might love my 1923 car, but is it dangerous to
be on the road? Like it's, it's,
yeah, I don't think you should drive that car.
Right, right, it has to be updated.
And I also think like the flip side of that is,
I can't unlove something that had a positive effect on me
to the degree she did.
I can only recognize that I loved her so much,
I was willing to gloss over and not be bothered by all the problems.
But I still, you know, even reading parts of the book, I mean, parts of them are really up
setting as we heard, but it's just like there is a magic to them. I get why I love them. I still
love them. I think you're allowed to still love them. I think you're allowed to still love them. I still love them. I think you're allowed to still love them. I think you're allowed to still love them. Yeah. And to also think critically about them and to talk critically
about them. Mm hmm. How do you guys feel? Joe, you came to this with very little knowledge,
so you have the coldest eye on this of the three of us. You know, I, what I really enjoyed
during this journey was experiencing the magic. It was actually really fun to experience the magic through your eyes, but as an outsider, I think the problems were always just so, so,
clear to me with the TV show, with the books, but all of that said, I don't think that they shouldn't
be read anymore. I don't think they should be banned. I don't think that they shouldn't be read anymore. I don't think they should be banned.
I don't think they should be taken off library shelves. I do think that they should be approached
with critical discussion in a critical eye, but I also think there is a lot of good in
there that it would be a real shame to remove from the world.
Emily, what do you think to remove from the world.
Emily, what do you think? You knew the show.
You were familiar with the books, but you loved the show.
Yeah.
Yeah, I was a show lover, but I've really done the crash
chorus in all aspects of Laura in the past year.
I reread all of the books.
We took the two-week long and then extra weekend road trip
to all the sites. And to keep going with your car passing inspection metaphor.
I think you have to make sure that everything is up to your standards, but then it's so important to go out there and get on the road because if we had made this all just in a vacuum in the studio,
like it would be a completely different show. I think like half the insights we got to,
we wouldn't have even thought of,
because seeing how Laura landed in every specific place
from like seeing her embraced at Laura's sites
like Wana Grove and Desmet,
but then going out to Custer
and being in the middle of native reservations
and understanding how this lands differently
with different audiences,
putting yourself in the shoes of people who are not white and who have been harmed by this narrative,
definitely has made me come to the conclusion that I don't think these should be taught in anything
besides a higher level literature class or history class. I don't think these should be taught to
young kids in classrooms. I think they can still be read.
I really hope that one day there will be additions for children
to understand all of the context so that that's what parents
can read to their children.
But so yeah, I don't think they should be banned,
but I do think we should filter how they're understood.
Yeah, I think for me, the more painful conclusion I've come to, I've given this book set to every friend.
That's how to child. It was my go-to, you know, baby gift for a long time.
And I wouldn't do that anymore. It's too violent.
In a perfect world, how I'd like to see these books package
because I don't think they should be taken off shelves. I think we're seeing books being
taken off shelves and I can't support that at all. But I think the books need to be package.
I think a lot of the Disney movies now which come when you start watching an old Disney
movie, they come with this, it's almost like a content warning of like what you're about to watch
is really problematic and we recognize that. I think the books themselves need to be packaged with
enormous context of who were the Native Americans that Laura watched leave,
quote unquote, Indian territory and what is their story? And it needs to be in the books in a way that makes it
just as engaging as what you're reading.
So I think it should be included in every one of these box sets.
But I also think the largest solution to this is that,
and this is already happening, we know from talking
to Lizzie's college classes,
the spotlight needs to be moved away from Laura, right?
Like Laura shouldn't occupy this much space
in children's classrooms or in children's literature.
There needs to be so much more space for the other stories.
And I think, you know, Shina,
one of her other producers asked me earlier
if I had the choice of giving up Laura
and substituting her with someone who was less of a problem.
And I think it brings me joy right now
to know that I can give other books to kids
with better representation.
Like, I can let go.
That's what I think I meant at the beginning of this.
When I say, you know, when you love something,
you have to let it go.
I can still love her.
Eight-year-old, glenous loves her.
But I can find other things to give to other kids.
And hopefully they experience that degree of joy
with stories that are less violent and less capable of harm, I guess.
I want kids to feel the degree of joy and passion I felt, but about better and different
stories.
And so then that becomes, you know, the challenge, I think certainly for those of us devoted
enough to little house is to invest in
finding what those other stories are and providing those stories. I don't have to be giving little
house out to anyone. I can just have my little house memory and don't need to pass it on. I guess
is my end result of this, which sort of makes me a little sad, but it makes me not sad too, because I think, oh, there's other stuff there. There's other stuff out there. And there's
other joys for kids to have that I just want them to have the joy. It doesn't have to be about the
same story I had. Yeah. And I think one of the things that really did change my mind about
Little House, and I think this is true for a lot of our listeners too is when
we started to talk about Rose and all of the ways that she was involved in writing and
editing the books.
And there was one really key fact about our favorite line.
Now is now.
It can never be a long time ago, which closes the end of the first book.
And it's that a lot of scholars like Caroline Fraser particularly think that Rose might have written that line.
What do you think about that?
I mean, as a kid, Rose would have devastated me.
As a grown up, I just recognized all the things Joe and I talked about about having a great editor and complicated relationships.
So knowing Rose came up with that line at this point,
I just think I have mainlined Rose in a way that I,
this is, you know, when I talk about inhaling these books,
I thought I was mainlining Laura.
I was mainlining quite a lot of Rose.
And of course Rose is responsible for the line
that sums up the entire book.
She enabled Laura to be a genius.
And that is extraordinary.
And it might be that she articulated a truth about Laura better than Laura did. So it kind
of, to be quite honest with you, it feels sort of perfect that a woman who refused to be
associated as a writer of the book, who tried to undermine our mother at every turn
is also responsible for the truest line in the entire series.
So it's like, that's a perfect distillation of this entire series to be.
It is the perfect essence of, I like what you said, that was already in Laura's work
and then Rose just was able to package the essence of it. There's no Laura.
There's Rose and Laura.
So in my DNA, when I talk about Laura's in my DNA, like Rose is in there too.
Great.
Should we move on to listener comments?
Yes.
It's been so interesting to read all the comments and reviews from people and it feels like
they fall into one of two camps of criticism, which
is either I still love Laura too much or we're being far too critical of Laura, but I'm really
interested to know, you know, everyone who sent in their voice memos and we're so grateful
for everyone who did, whether they have been experiencing a similar struggle to what
I've been going through over the last year. And whether there's an overlap
in their response to this with mine.
Hi, my name is Karen. I am a black female who grew up in the 70s and loved the little housebooks,
the 70s and loved the Little House books, reading Little Town on the Prairie and the menstrual show. When I was a child, I always felt uncomfortable, but back then I didn't have language for
what was happening to me. But reading Prairie Fires and listening to this podcast,
I just see the racism within those books
and I'm very torn about how I feel about them now.
Hi, Wilder Podcast.
My name is Maddie.
I was raised in a very fundamentalist
homeschooling community, religious homeschooling community.
And it's interesting as y'all were talking about
kind of these like libertarian ideals
going over your head as a child.
Well, I was reading them as a child.
The adults in my life who were encouraging me to read these
were drawing my attention to them
and using it as an education.
Like they are being forced out of Indian territory
because big government is bad, that kind of thing.
I still have family in these communities.
I am not a part of it anymore,
but I talked to my nieces who are being homeschooled
in that community and talk to them a little bit
about their experience with the book.
And they said that it's still going on.
That's still kind of the message being attached with the books.
I think that it just adds a layer of complication
on how we should be approaching these books with children.
I don't know if I'll read them to mine, honestly,
because I don't know if I would want that propaganda
shared with them if they're not old enough to comprehend it.
My name is Caitlin. I was born into a family that adored the Little House series.
Most of my ancestors lived in eastern South Dakota at the same time she did.
People today talk about how important representation is to kids.
And I agree. I think that's why I adored Laura so much. There aren't many famous people who come out of South Dakota,
but she was.
She made me proud of who I was and where I lived.
She was me, and if she could do great things, so could I.
Modern South Dakota can be like the one Laura lived in,
but can also be much different.
A lot of your podcasts has discussed the return
to the prairie aesthetic, but the prairies are emptying because of rural flight.
There is some sense of community,
but it's mostly reserved for those
with the right last name.
Outsiders are not very welcome.
So my opinion on Laura has changed with the times
and especially with this podcast,
but I still want to read these books to my kids someday
because our ancestors live like Laura,
and I feel it's important to teach
my future children about their past.
But I feel that I now have a more educated
and mature view of the books
and now how to use it as an educational tool
rather than a propaganda tool.
Hello, my son is getting married soon and his bride is indigenous and I imagine
reading these things to my future grandchildren who would be indigenous and it was pretty horrifying
to just to see how it might be seen through their eyes whereas before when somebody would bring it
up. I would think well you can't apply modern sensibilities
to the past. People lived in their times. There are things that our grandchildren will be horrified
by that we do every day without thought. But it's, I don't think it's appropriate for children
anymore. And that saddens me immensely. I'm someone who loves the Little House books and I've written
about them. I've thought of myself as pretty clear-eyed about these issues in the books and I figured I'd
just done all that reconciliation work. So I have to say I really was not prepared for episode seven to hit me the way it did, you know,
with the college class and just hearing how the Little House
books, how they look to younger generations.
That was a little rough, but also I get it.
I think a lot of people who hold onto the books
a certain way really try everything to avoid those feelings.
And I get that too, but I'm thinking now that the more you let yourself just have those feelings, the more you realize how little it really costs you
to acknowledge the other perspectives, you know, and just give them spacing your head. Okay, so,
I guess here's a metaphor. I actually made a pig's bladder balloon and
anyone who who has done that knows how horrifying it is in real life.
I mean like it looks like something like a serial killer would play with.
But you can still hold that idea you had when you were a kid of, you know, this piglet or being just a fun balloon that is inside a pig
like a crack or a jack prize.
And you can let that exist alongside the reality
that it looks disgusting.
What's so interesting about all this listener feedback
is that we all seem to be struggling with similar things
and it's, you know, further evidence that it's hard to interrogate the things you
love as a kid because it's so, it runs so deep and it can be painful. So many of us are
in the same place of wanting to do so and struggling to do so and, you know, coming up with similar answers. Once again, little houses the zeitgeist
of reckoning with childhood love.
Once again, it's complicated.
Okay, well, Glenis, maybe one of the final questions
I have for you is how do you think
about yourself differently or what did you learn
about yourself making this entire show?
I mean, really understanding the degree to which I allowed
things to be acceptable simply because I was so
relieved to see a version of how I was in the world in a character
is upsetting and really makes you consider, I don't know if selfishness
is the right word, but all the things we let pass by because of our own enjoyment, enjoy.
And then subsequently flipping that and trying to understand not just the pain of not seeing a
version of yourself in the world, but the pain of seeing a terrible version of yourself in the world, which is what happens in these books to not white people and in so much of the narratives we have.
And thinking about, you know, just what I was willing to tolerate for my own pleasure
and to some degree, survival is something I continue to think about.
But I also think about this.
I lived in the little housebooks for most of my childhood.
And then the second I could, I stepped through the map on my parents' family room floor.
You can see Lake Preston.
And then right to the left of that is Dismant.
And attempted to recreate what I had learned from Laura.
I wrote, I traveled, I had, and continued to have adventures.
And I have a deep belief in the value of even the smallest parts of these stories.
I took to heart some of the messages I found in Little House about honesty, bravery, adventure,
and then we applied it to the person who gave it to me in the first place.
And you've been listening to us do that.
Thank you for coming along for the ride.
Laura was a complicated, resilient, fascinating person, and it's been strangely wonderful
to discover and accept
that. She is a problem. You want to hold on to her, you have to hold on to that too and
then keep going. There are other stories and there are other nails and it might be
time for this to be a very long time ago.
That's just maybe a thing.
Okay, I don't actually know where the grave is, but I guess this grave is so much just for the ones that must flower maybe.
Yeah.
Wilder graves that way. It says it over there.
I'm here to show the waste who go through the graveyard behind my house and try and find
people who were born in 1867 because they were born in the same year or less.
Wilder.
It's just a big stone that says,
Wilder.
Oh, here we go.
They have more.
Okay, that was the backside apparently.
90 is a solid age.
For what?
Laura Ingalls and almonds.
I mean, a month was 92.
Yeah.
It's like everything in those books.
They were so close to death so many times.
Yeah.
But she made it.
She made it right here.
I have to say, I have no emotional connection to people's graves.
Maybe because I grew up behind a graveyard.
I think your people are buried does not have resonance for me.
It's where they lived.
Like, yeah.
Going to, to smat is so much more emotional.
We're listening to Paz fiddle.
And visiting a grave.
I don't know.
Is it not kind of crazy that we're standing on top of her then?
We're not sitting on top of her.
We're sitting on top of her remains? We're not standing on top of her. We're standing on top of her remains.
This whole entire podcast is standing on top of her.
Right?
The End of the Story
Wilder is written and hosted by me,
Glonismic Nickel.
Our story editors are Emily Marinoff and Joe Piazza.
Our senior producer is Emily Marinoff.
Our producers are Mary Dew, Shino Zaki, and Jessica Crinechitch.
Our associate producer is Lauren Phillips.
Production help from a savory Sharma.
Sound designed and mixing by Amanda Rose Smith.
Our amazing theme song and additional music was composed by Elise Rose Smith. Our amazing theme song and additional music
was composed by Elise McCoy.
We are executive produced by Joe Piazza, Nikki Aitor,
Ali Perry, and me.
Final special thanks to Ranger Tanya Gardner,
Heather Lee McFarlane and Pauline Fettcon
from Ball Zen Studio in Paris.
Laura Ingalls-Bilder Home Association for the Recording of Laura's Voice.
Upsalocate tours at the Little Big Horn Battlefield National Monument.
Dr. Debbie Reese and Professor Lizzie Skernick
and every one of you who sent in your thoughts and feedback.
As always, please see our show notes for further reading
and links for the subjects we discussed in this episode.
That's it for Wilder.
Thank you so much for listening.
We're going to keep posting on Instagram and TikTok,
so keep an eye out.
There may be more bonus content in news. to. Did you miss me? The new season of lies, scandals and skeletons in the closet.
I am proud to take office as your first openly gay me. This season it's all out in the open.
Listen to princes of salvage on the i-hard radio app,
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
On how rude Tanner
Redos, the Full House
rewatch podcast, join
characters Stephanie Tanner
and Kimmy Ghibler, also
known as actresses Jody
Sweeten and Andrea Barber
as they relive every
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Friday night comfort show.
We spent our entire childhoods
on a little show called
Full House, playing
frenemies, but becoming
besties whenever the
cameras were drooling.
And now, 35 years later, it's our biggest adventure yet.
Listen to How Rude Teneritos on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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