The People Named the Chippewa
Title | The People Named the Chippewa PDF eBook |
Author | Gerald Robert Vizenor |
Publisher | U of Minnesota Press |
Pages | 188 |
Release | 1984 |
Genre | Indians of North America |
ISBN | 9781452902920 |
The Everlasting Sky
Title | The Everlasting Sky PDF eBook |
Author | Gerald Robert Vizenor |
Publisher | New York : Crowell-Collier Press |
Pages | 186 |
Release | 1972 |
Genre | Indian reservations |
ISBN |
An account of the Anishinabe people of Minnesota (the Woodland Indians known as the Chippewa), their relations with the white man and their struggle for identity. Based on taped interviews and the author's own experiences.
Our War Paint Is Writers' Ink
Title | Our War Paint Is Writers' Ink PDF eBook |
Author | Adam Spry |
Publisher | State University of New York Press |
Pages | 256 |
Release | 2018-02-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1438468830 |
For the Anishinaabeg—the indigenous peoples of the Great Lakes—literary writing has long been an important means of asserting their continued existence as a nation, with its own culture, history, and sovereignty. At the same time, literature has also offered American writers a way to make the Anishinaabe Nation disappear, often by relegating it to a distant past. In this book, Adam Spry puts these two traditions in conversation with one another, showing how novels, poetry, and drama have been the ground upon which Anishinaabeg and Americans have clashed as representatives of two nations contentiously occupying the same land. Focusing on moments of contact, appropriation, and exchange, Spry examines a diverse range of texts in order to reveal a complex historical network of Native and non-Native writers who read and adapted each other's work across the boundaries of nation, culture, and time. By reconceiving the relationship between the United States and the Anishinaabeg as one of transnational exchange, Our War Paint Is Writers' Ink offers a new methodology for the study of Native American literatures, capable of addressing a long history of mutual cultural influence while simultaneously arguing for the legitimacy, and continued necessity, of indigenous nationhood. In addition, the author reexamines several critical assumptions—about authenticity, identity, and nationhood itself—that have become common wisdom in both Native American and US literary studies.
Writing with Light
Title | Writing with Light PDF eBook |
Author | Mick Gidley |
Publisher | Peter Lang |
Pages | 306 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 9783039115723 |
Contributor Martin Padget's essay: Native Americans, the Photobook and the Southwest: Ansel Adams' and Mary Austin's Taos Pueblo was awarded the 2010 Arthur Miller Essay Prize. This book offers a collection of essays on the interface between literature and photography, as exemplified in important North American texts.
Shadow Distance
Title | Shadow Distance PDF eBook |
Author | Gerald Vizenor |
Publisher | Wesleyan University Press |
Pages | 375 |
Release | 2012-01-01 |
Genre | Literary Collections |
ISBN | 081957273X |
A wide-ranging collection of fiction, essays, poetry and more by the acclaimed Native American author of Bearheart and Interior Landscapes. Gerald Vizenor is one of our era’s most important and prolific Native American writers. Drawing on the best work of an acclaimed career, Shadow Distance: A Gerald Vizenor Reader reveals the wide range of his imagination and the evolution of his central themes. This compelling collection includes not only selections from Vizenor’s innovative fiction, but also poetry, autobiography, essays, journalism, and the previously unpublished screenplay “Harold of Orange,” winner of the Film-in-the-Cities national screenwriting competition. Whether focusing on Native American tricksters or legal and financial claims of tribal sovereignty, Vizenor continually underscores the diversities of modern traditions, the mixed ethnicity that characterizes those who claim Native American origin, and cultural permeability of an increasingly commercial, global world.
Nationhood and Improvised Belief in American Fiction
Title | Nationhood and Improvised Belief in American Fiction PDF eBook |
Author | Ann Genzale |
Publisher | Rowman & Littlefield |
Pages | 147 |
Release | 2021-01-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 179360553X |
Nationhood and Improvised Belief in American Fiction highlights the ways religious belief and practice intersect with questions of national belonging in the work of major contemporary writers. Through readings of novels by Louise Erdrich, Toni Morrison, Cristina García, and others, this book argues that the representations of syncretic, culturally hybrid, and improvised forms of religious practice operate in these novels as critiques of exclusionary constructions of national identity, providing models for alternate ways of belonging based on shared religious beliefs and practices. Rather than treating the religious history of the U.S. as one of increasing secularization, this book instead calls for greater attention to the diversity of religious experience in the U.S., as well as a deeper understanding of the ways in which these experiences can inform relationships to the national community.
Gerald Vizenor
Title | Gerald Vizenor PDF eBook |
Author | Kimberly M. Blaeser |
Publisher | University of Oklahoma Press |
Pages | 288 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9780806128740 |
Kimberly M. Blaeser begins with an examination of Vizenor's concept of Native American oral culture and his unique incorporation of oral tradition in the written word. She details Vizenor's efforts to produce a form of writing that resists static meaning, involves the writer in the creation of the literary moment, and invites political action and explores the place of Vizenor's work within the larger context of contemporary tribal literature, Native American scholarship, and critical theory.