Kryder-Reid, Elizabeth2018-01-262018-01-262015Kryder-Reid, E. (2015). Greenwashed: Identity and Landscape at the California Missions. In K. D. Springs (Ed.), Landscape and identity: archaeology and human geography. Oxford, England: Achaeopress.https://hdl.handle.net/1805/15088This paper explores the relationship of place and identity in the historical and contemporary contexts of the California mission landscapes, conceiving of identity as a category of both analysis and practice (Brubaker and Cooper 2000). The missions include twenty-one sites founded along the California coast and central valley in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The missions are all currently open to the public and regularly visited as heritage sites, while many also serve as active Catholic parish churches. This paper offers a reading of the mission landscapes over time and traces the materiality of identity narratives inscribed in them, particularly in ‘mission gardens’ planted during the late 19th and first half of the 20th century. These contested places are both celebrated as sites of California's origins and decried as spaces of oppression and even genocide for its indigenous peoples. Theorized as relational settings where identity is constituted through narrative and memory (Sommers 1994; Halbwachs 1992) and experienced as staged, performed heritage, the mission landscapes bind these contested identities into a coherent postcolonial experience of a shared past by creating a conceptual metaphor of ‘mission as garden’ that encompasses their disparities of emotional resonance and ideological meaning.enCalifornia missionGardenPostcolonialNarrativeConceptual MetaphorSacredSecularHeritageIdentityCultural memoryGreenwashed: Identity and Landscape at the California MissionsBook chapter