Abstract

Late into Percival Everett's 1996 novel Watershed, the narrator and protagonist Robert Hawks, hydrologist who has felt compelled to investigate the murder of two FBI agents near the (fictional) Plata Indian Reservation, considers I had done so much to remove all things political from my life. As disinterested scientist disinclined to care about even the applications of his work, he is accustomed to seeing himself an objective, hired gun, regardless of whether the state or the Naturalist's Conservancy is calling on his expertise.1 As with the emotional distance that Jake Gittes, the private investigator in the film Chinatown, usually puts between himself and his clients (in story in which water also plays leading role), so with Robert's cool, studied, and guiltless indifference to the social and political realms: his detachment is, in the end, not immune to the entanglements of the personal and political past, to the history in the water. The to know about case in which he is not involved turns into a longstanding, unanswered, personal (153) to understand his grandfather, an atheist and doctor who committed suicide while on hunting expedition with the young Robert. This desire to know more also becomes historical quest that leads Everett's narrator not only to discern the connections and differences between Africanand Native American experience under American colonialism, including the narrator's personal experience at the hands of white police officers, but to participate in minor act of revolution alongside members of the Plata Creek tribe, in which he acts no longer as objective scientist but as human subject with borrowed gun. Part mystery, part western, Watershed is novel in which history weighs heavily, perhaps more so than in any other of Everett's works. If Everett's other westerns, God's Country and Grand Canyon, Inc, are mischievous re-workings of generic conventions that call to mind Mark Twain, then Watershed is non-formulaic but equally revisionist western more like John Sayles' soberly searching film Lone Star, in which an investigation into the incestuous western past has both personal and political consequences for the curious. Seen together, Everett's western novels both exhibit and tackle one of the central literary problems in literature of the American West: how does western writer free his imagination and at the same time respond to the demand for historical authenticity that readers for two centuries have brought to this cultural landscape (whether real or imagined) of conquests and land-grabs, of national myths and regional realities? The formula Western (in its most popular version and with little sense of irony or parody) often responds to the history of American expansion and colonialism with

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