Background/Question/Methods The American legend of Paul Bunyan and his blue ox, Babe, has underpinned popular folk narratives about the development of the United States, particularly in the Upper Midwest, for over a century. The larger-than-life lumberjack is commemorated across the United States with multitudes of spaces dedicated to honoring him and his ‘role’ in shaping the geographies of frontier America.
However, the legacy of Paul Bunyan has a darker side--it serves to obscure the real-life dispossession and destruction of environments and spaces in which Indigenous peoples have inhabited and have had relationships with dating to before colonization.
Results/Conclusions Building off of the work done by Nik Nerburn in his ‘zine’ In The Shadow Of Paul Bunyan (2014), this paper traces the history of the legend of Paul Bunyan and places it alongside settler colonial development and environmental degradation, bringing these histories into conversation with awareness (or lack thereof) surrounding historical and contemporaneous Indigenous relationships to land and environment in various American geographies. I build the argument that American folklore and the ways that the settler state rhetorically constructs its own environments and geographies serves as a ‘whitewashing’ and elimination of Indigenous environments and geographies, which is part and parcel of settler colonialism.