Reid\u27s discussion of the formal properties of Erdrich\u27s work helps explain the author\u27s popular appeal. Mewing easily between urban and rural settings, between reservation culture and mainstream culture, Erdrich has been evoking the various sets of social and historical circumstances that define the lives of contemporary Native Americans in the Great Plains. In The Master Butchers Singing Club (2003), Erdrich turns her attention explicitly to her own part-German ancestry and fictionalizes it, thereby bringing a n element of both thematic and autobiographical relevance into prominence
In Tracks, Louise Erdrich presents two characters, Fleur and Pauline, whose lives parallel one anoth...
Louise Erdrich is an award-winning Anishinaabe-American author, whose works of fiction have attracte...
Louise Erdrich’s novel Tracks deals with the years between 1912 and 1919, when the North Dakota Chip...
Reid\u27s discussion of the formal properties of Erdrich\u27s work helps explain the author\u27s pop...
As an intensely personal genre, poetry intimately reveals Louise Erdrich\u27s voice as her well-know...
With these words, Louise Erdrich sets forth her own manifesto for writing about her place. A Native ...
Louise Erdrich is a mixed blood Turtle Mountain Chippewa, educated in the dominant culture. Her volu...
Louise Erdrich is an important contemporary Native American writer of mixed heritage, known for her ...
This article is the editorial introduction to the collection of essays entitled Louise Erdrich. An o...
In her novel Tracks, Louise Erdrich tells the story of a band of Anishinaabe early in the twentieth ...
The main aim of this thesis is to analyse Native American cultural motifs used in the novels by Loui...
Louise Erdrich has shaped the possibilities for Native American, women's and popular fiction in the ...
The focus of my thesis is to consider the interaction between theme and form in Louise Erdrich's fic...
The recent publication of Trucks provides the background for understanding the connections and histo...
The art of storytelling is a universal activity whose form depends on culture and historical context...
In Tracks, Louise Erdrich presents two characters, Fleur and Pauline, whose lives parallel one anoth...
Louise Erdrich is an award-winning Anishinaabe-American author, whose works of fiction have attracte...
Louise Erdrich’s novel Tracks deals with the years between 1912 and 1919, when the North Dakota Chip...
Reid\u27s discussion of the formal properties of Erdrich\u27s work helps explain the author\u27s pop...
As an intensely personal genre, poetry intimately reveals Louise Erdrich\u27s voice as her well-know...
With these words, Louise Erdrich sets forth her own manifesto for writing about her place. A Native ...
Louise Erdrich is a mixed blood Turtle Mountain Chippewa, educated in the dominant culture. Her volu...
Louise Erdrich is an important contemporary Native American writer of mixed heritage, known for her ...
This article is the editorial introduction to the collection of essays entitled Louise Erdrich. An o...
In her novel Tracks, Louise Erdrich tells the story of a band of Anishinaabe early in the twentieth ...
The main aim of this thesis is to analyse Native American cultural motifs used in the novels by Loui...
Louise Erdrich has shaped the possibilities for Native American, women's and popular fiction in the ...
The focus of my thesis is to consider the interaction between theme and form in Louise Erdrich's fic...
The recent publication of Trucks provides the background for understanding the connections and histo...
The art of storytelling is a universal activity whose form depends on culture and historical context...
In Tracks, Louise Erdrich presents two characters, Fleur and Pauline, whose lives parallel one anoth...
Louise Erdrich is an award-winning Anishinaabe-American author, whose works of fiction have attracte...
Louise Erdrich’s novel Tracks deals with the years between 1912 and 1919, when the North Dakota Chip...