My dissertation places the work of three early Native American women writers---S. Alice Callahan, E. Pauline Johnson, and Sarah Winnemucca---in dialogue with texts by Lydia Maria Child, Ann Stephens, and Maria Susanna Cummins. Although these Native and Anglo-American writers are usually studied separately, I argue that by examining them together we can expand predominant conceptions of sentimentality and acknowledge anger as its long neglected counterpart. This is a project not about how anger was felt by Anglo and Native American women in the nineteenth century but how it is defined, performed, and represented in certain texts. I treat anger as a system of relations, a mark of the connection between self and community that is always inf...
This book examines the fascinating and often disturbing portrayal of Native American women in film. ...
The four novelists who are the focus of this study expose the complicity in violence of the dominant...
This dissertation argues that numerous parallels exist between Native American literature, especiall...
My dissertation places the work of three early Native American women writers---S. Alice Callahan, E....
(print) xiv, 177 p. : ill. ; 24 cmIntroduction : anger, sentimentality, and American Indians -- Play...
Longstanding political, social, and academic debates surrounding women’s anger have followed a disti...
This study explores the sentimental genre in three American novels written by women in the 1850s: Su...
ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Sentimental Ideology, Women\u27s Pedagogy, and American Indian Women\u2...
250 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1983.The dissertation examines Ame...
In Declarations of Sentimentalism: American Women\u27s Writing 1850–1900, I argue that sentimentalis...
This dissertation addresses the genocidal practices of the U.S. educational policies in connection t...
This dissertation traces the gender differences of black rage expressed in African American literatu...
This project explores the intersecting discourses of the "Woman Question" and the "Indian Problem" f...
This thesis will examine nineteenth-century women and their primary role in the cultural formation o...
Between Women: Alliances and Divisions in American Indian, Mexican American, and Anglo American Lite...
This book examines the fascinating and often disturbing portrayal of Native American women in film. ...
The four novelists who are the focus of this study expose the complicity in violence of the dominant...
This dissertation argues that numerous parallels exist between Native American literature, especiall...
My dissertation places the work of three early Native American women writers---S. Alice Callahan, E....
(print) xiv, 177 p. : ill. ; 24 cmIntroduction : anger, sentimentality, and American Indians -- Play...
Longstanding political, social, and academic debates surrounding women’s anger have followed a disti...
This study explores the sentimental genre in three American novels written by women in the 1850s: Su...
ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Sentimental Ideology, Women\u27s Pedagogy, and American Indian Women\u2...
250 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1983.The dissertation examines Ame...
In Declarations of Sentimentalism: American Women\u27s Writing 1850–1900, I argue that sentimentalis...
This dissertation addresses the genocidal practices of the U.S. educational policies in connection t...
This dissertation traces the gender differences of black rage expressed in African American literatu...
This project explores the intersecting discourses of the "Woman Question" and the "Indian Problem" f...
This thesis will examine nineteenth-century women and their primary role in the cultural formation o...
Between Women: Alliances and Divisions in American Indian, Mexican American, and Anglo American Lite...
This book examines the fascinating and often disturbing portrayal of Native American women in film. ...
The four novelists who are the focus of this study expose the complicity in violence of the dominant...
This dissertation argues that numerous parallels exist between Native American literature, especiall...