In a novel critics have described as a "thriller-like" coming-of-age story, Louise Erdrich's The Round House (2012) integrates two apparently conflicting approaches to Native American law. First, Felix S. Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law legitimizes the need for working with allies to Indigenous peoples in developing contextual applications of settler state laws. The second draws on the authority of authorless Anishinaabe stories and dreams. While Cohen and his descendants in tribal law practice are allies to the Anishinabeg, dream narrations by the narrator's grandfather affirm the contemporary vitality of Anishinaabe approaches to justice. Finally, Erdrich's narration suggests why restorative justice for women in Indigenous communit...
This paper offers a comparative assessment of how Ana Castillo (in The Guardians) and Louise Erdrich...
Although largely unheralded in its time, D\u27Arcy McNickle\u27s The Surrounded has become a classic...
This article is the editorial introduction to the collection of essays entitled Louise Erdrich. An o...
In a novel critics have described as a "thriller-like" coming-of-age story, Louise Erdrich's The Rou...
Author Louise Erdrich, a member of the Chippewa tribe in North Dakota, is renowned for addressing hi...
Louise Erdrich''s The Round House (2012) is not only an original detective novel but a moving postco...
Abstract: My talk today will demonstrate how author Louise Erdrich’s novel The Round House offers a ...
This article discusses the significant shift in terms of genre to be observed in Louise Erdrich‘s fo...
Louise Erdrich is an award-winning Anishinaabe-American author, whose works of fiction have attracte...
In the best-selling and award-winning novel The Round House (2012), Louise Erdrich strategically use...
This essay makes a contribution to the current conversation on Native American resurgence in the con...
The dominant consensus among interpretations of Louise Erdrich's novel The Plague of Doves (2008) re...
Published in 1994, Louise Erdrich’s The Bingo Palace traces the journey of Lipsha Morrissey, who is ...
The Night Watchman is a novel published by Native American woman writer Louise Erdrich in 2020. The ...
Jacobs offers readers abundant contextual information pertinent to a critical understanding of Erdri...
This paper offers a comparative assessment of how Ana Castillo (in The Guardians) and Louise Erdrich...
Although largely unheralded in its time, D\u27Arcy McNickle\u27s The Surrounded has become a classic...
This article is the editorial introduction to the collection of essays entitled Louise Erdrich. An o...
In a novel critics have described as a "thriller-like" coming-of-age story, Louise Erdrich's The Rou...
Author Louise Erdrich, a member of the Chippewa tribe in North Dakota, is renowned for addressing hi...
Louise Erdrich''s The Round House (2012) is not only an original detective novel but a moving postco...
Abstract: My talk today will demonstrate how author Louise Erdrich’s novel The Round House offers a ...
This article discusses the significant shift in terms of genre to be observed in Louise Erdrich‘s fo...
Louise Erdrich is an award-winning Anishinaabe-American author, whose works of fiction have attracte...
In the best-selling and award-winning novel The Round House (2012), Louise Erdrich strategically use...
This essay makes a contribution to the current conversation on Native American resurgence in the con...
The dominant consensus among interpretations of Louise Erdrich's novel The Plague of Doves (2008) re...
Published in 1994, Louise Erdrich’s The Bingo Palace traces the journey of Lipsha Morrissey, who is ...
The Night Watchman is a novel published by Native American woman writer Louise Erdrich in 2020. The ...
Jacobs offers readers abundant contextual information pertinent to a critical understanding of Erdri...
This paper offers a comparative assessment of how Ana Castillo (in The Guardians) and Louise Erdrich...
Although largely unheralded in its time, D\u27Arcy McNickle\u27s The Surrounded has become a classic...
This article is the editorial introduction to the collection of essays entitled Louise Erdrich. An o...