This new collection of previously unpublished writing by Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin) marks a milestone in the scholarship of this crucial figure in Native literary and intellectual history. Meticulously researched, editor Jane Hafen\u27s compilation advances our understanding of this Yankton Sioux writer, activist, and artist, about whom little has been documented. Hafen located a range of her writings in a variety of archives, from early poems written at Earlham College to Iktomi stories and the opera she created in collaboration with William Hanson in 1913. In her introduction, Hafen provides the most accurate biographical overview of Gertrude Bonnin to date, showing how her life was shaped by major events in Native history as well as by...
With the first book devoted exclusively to women\u27s painting, Patricia Janis Broder addresses a de...
GHOST DANCING ANEW The history and significance of the Ghost Dance received renewed scholarly attent...
I\u27m not sure that I\u27ve ever read such a light volume that carries such heavy contents. This bo...
This new collection of previously unpublished writing by Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin) marks a milest...
In 1913 Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (Zitkala Ša, 1876-1938) collaborated with local Duchesne, Utah, musi...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...
For the reader new to the field, perhaps attracted by an encounter with an individual poem or poet, ...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
In the preface to this new edited volume, Elizabeth Cook-Lynn notes that while she learned to read a...
This book -- a major literary work by one of the more widely read early Native American authors, and...
In his informative and innovative exploration of Kiowa music, Luke Lassiter focuses on intersubjecti...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
Brill de Ramirez\u27s work addresses at least two crucial issues that scholars of Native American li...
This is the second monograph on Native American autobiography, and together with Bataille and Sands\...
With the first book devoted exclusively to women\u27s painting, Patricia Janis Broder addresses a de...
GHOST DANCING ANEW The history and significance of the Ghost Dance received renewed scholarly attent...
I\u27m not sure that I\u27ve ever read such a light volume that carries such heavy contents. This bo...
This new collection of previously unpublished writing by Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin) marks a milest...
In 1913 Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (Zitkala Ša, 1876-1938) collaborated with local Duchesne, Utah, musi...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...
For the reader new to the field, perhaps attracted by an encounter with an individual poem or poet, ...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
In the preface to this new edited volume, Elizabeth Cook-Lynn notes that while she learned to read a...
This book -- a major literary work by one of the more widely read early Native American authors, and...
In his informative and innovative exploration of Kiowa music, Luke Lassiter focuses on intersubjecti...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
Brill de Ramirez\u27s work addresses at least two crucial issues that scholars of Native American li...
This is the second monograph on Native American autobiography, and together with Bataille and Sands\...
With the first book devoted exclusively to women\u27s painting, Patricia Janis Broder addresses a de...
GHOST DANCING ANEW The history and significance of the Ghost Dance received renewed scholarly attent...
I\u27m not sure that I\u27ve ever read such a light volume that carries such heavy contents. This bo...