Now We Have Forgotten the Old Indian Law: Choctaw Culture and the Evolution of Corporal Punishment

American Indian Law Review, Dec 1999

By Steven M. Karr, Published on 01/01/99

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Now We Have Forgotten the Old Indian Law: Choctaw Culture and the Evolution of Corporal Punishment

American Indian Law Review Volume 23 Number 2 1-1-1999 Now We Have Forgotten the Old Indian Law: Choctaw Culture and the Evolution of Corporal Punishment Steven M. Karr Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.ou.edu/ailr Part of the Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law Commons Recommended Citation Steven M. Karr, Now We Have Forgotten the Old Indian Law: Choctaw Culture and the Evolution of Corporal Punishment, 23 AM. INDIAN L. REV. 409 (1999), https://digitalcommons.law.ou.edu/ailr/vol23/iss2/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in American Indian Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact . NOW WE HAVE FORGOTTEN THE OLD INDIAN LAW: CHOCTAW CULTURE AND THE EVOLUTION OF CORPORAL PUNISHMENT Steven M. Karr* Unconsciously the savage, in his primitive thought concepts based upon physical reaction, went beyond either morality or its religious correlations. The abstractconcepts of good and evil, as we understandthem, and as Christianitybroadcastthem through the mouthpiece of its anthropomorphicgodhead,meant nothing at all to the savage. Because of this, in all primitive societies, punishment, as observed and examined through humanitarian spectacles, is a barbarousprocedure.' Euro-American civilization's interpretations of alien societies demonstrates a narrow understanding of different cultures and customs. Too often modem societies imposed their own standards of social interaction upon societies deemed to be primitive with the intent of establishing more humane principles among these peoples. Many indigenous North American societies, practicing their distinct methods of social control, maintained standards which EuroAmerican culture arrogantly judged to be uncivilized. Ironically, some Native American societies, initially compelled to abandon traditional elements of their indigenous cultures, were later expected to reimplement these same elements so that they might achieve a more civilized state. The Choctaw, the Cherokee, the Chickasaw, the Creek, and the Seminole, as their regional proximity might suggest, shared many social and cultural traits. Common traits may allow reasonable inferences drawn from the study of one tribe to be applied to an examination of the others. The Five Tribes lived according to similar customs, institutions, and economic patterns. For example, smaller social units, clans or iksas, formed the larger town or band. And it was within these smaller units that legal institutions took shape and direction.' *The author is currently a doctoral student in history at Oklahoma State University (ABD). M.A., 1995, Pepperdine University; B.A., 1991, Saint Anselm College. The author whould like to thank Joseph A. Stout, Jr., L. G. Moses, and W. David Baird for their help in preparing this article. 1. GEORGE RYLEY SCOTr, THE HISTORY OF CORPORAL PUNISHMENT. A SURVEY OF FLAGELLATION IN ITS HISTORICAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL ASPECTS 4-5 (1945). 2. DUANE CHAMPAGNE, SOCIAL ORDER AND POLITICAL CHANGE: CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENTS AMiONG THE CHEROKEE, THE CHOCrAw, THE CHICKASAW, AND THE CREEK 40 (1992); JOHN PHILLIP REID, A LAW OF BLOOD: THE PRIMITIvE LAW OF THE CHEROKEE NATION 8-9 (1970) [hereinafter REID, A LAw OF BLOOD]; William H. Gilbert, Jr., Eastern Cherokee Social Organization,in SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY OF NORTH AMERICAN TRIBEs 286 (Fred Eggan Published by University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons, 1999 410 AMERICAN INDIAN LAW REVIEW [Vol. 23 The iksa, or kindred clan, was a group that claimed common matrilineal descent, and constituted the Choctaw's primary societal community. Commonly, major iksas were divided even further into family iksas. It was the family iksa, or domestic household, not the community at large, that provideA the most effective means of conveying the few formal procedures that existed in Native American society? These procedures represented ancient customs and social standards used to resolve differences within the community, or sanctions against those who may have disobeyed tribal law. Traditional Indian law placed little importance on personal rights and property, emphasizing instead the individual's need to maintain group cohesion and to strive for the betterment of all. Consequently, this informal legal system functioned effectively only if the larger community's cohesiveness was maintained through individual acceptance of customary procedures. The individual Indian's acceptance and active participation within this system displayed, however, a strong value on personal freedom, and an even stronger disvalue of physical coercion. Communal harmony was expected and maintained, but rarely as the result of forceful measures.4 To the first Europeans who encountered them, the social order and group cohesiveness within Indian communities was not apparent. Though formal written law codes did not exist, public opinion enforced clearly defined codes of traditional behavior and interaction. Indians sought group approval because of the close association most held with their families and clan members. For the majority of Indians, ridicule and ostracism were harsh punishments and effective tools in the maintenance of social control ed., 1955); JOHN R. SWANTON, THE INDIANS OF THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES 801-05 (Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 137, 1946) [hereinafter SWANTON, SOUTHEASTERN U.S.]; Edward Davis, Early Life Among the Five Civilized Tribes, 15 CHRONS. OKLA. 70 (1937). Although many cultural similarities exist among the Five Tribes, it is important to note that this is not intended to be a comparative study, clearly a task too complex for this article. Rather, the intention is to merely draw examples from these other four groups in order to better present an argument concerning Choctaw culture. 3. JOHN R.SWANTON, SOURCE MATERIAL FOR THE SOCIAL AND CEREMONIAL LIFE OF THE CHOCTAW INDIANS 79-84 (Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin No. 103, 1931) [hereinafter SWANTON, SOURCE MATERIAL]; ALEXANDER SPOEHR, CHANGING KINSHIP SYSTEMS: ASTUDY INTHE ACCULTURATION OF THE CREEKS, CHEROKEE, AND CHOCTAW (1947) (vol. 33, no. 4 of series), reprintedin FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, PUBLICATIONS OF THE FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 200-04 (1976). 4. CLARA SUE KIDWELL, CHOCTAWS AND MISSIONARIES INMISSISSIPPI, 1818-1918, at 28 (1995); SHARON O'BRIEN, AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBAL GOVERNMENT 201-02 (1989); REID, A LAW OF BLOOD, supra note 2, at 11-12; Fred Gearing, The StructuralPoses of the 18th Century Cherokee Villages, 60 AM. ANTHROPOLOGIST 1156 (1958). 5. JOHN PIIILLIP REID, A BETTER KIND OF HATCHET: LAW, TRADE, AND DIPLOMACY INTHE CHEROKEE NATION DURING THE EARLY YEARS OF EUROPEAN CONTACT 10 (1976); WILLIAM T. HAGAN, INDIAN POLICE AND JUDGE (...truncated)


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Steven M. Karr. Now We Have Forgotten the Old Indian Law: Choctaw Culture and the Evolution of Corporal Punishment, American Indian Law Review, 1999, pp. 409, Volume 23, Issue 2,