This is the second monograph on Native American autobiography, and together with Bataille and Sands\u27 American Indian Women Telling Their Lives will be the necessary starting point for future studies in this neglected area of American literature. An introduction and four chapters on individual works, with index and selected bibliography, comprise the text; the introduction and first chapter are most valuable. In the introduction Krupat articulates two requisites for critical reading of American Indian texts: consideration of means of production (focus on the intercultural relationship between author and transcriber-mediators), and critical theory to define artistic values (here, Northrop Frye\u27s categories of comedy, tragedy, romance an...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...
In Sending My Heart Back Across the Years, Hertha Wong, an assistant professor of English at the Uni...
Review of: "Indians and Emigrants: Encounters on the Overland Trails," by Michael L. Tate
This is the second monograph on Native American autobiography, and together with Bataille and Sands\...
American Indian Autobiography provides significant insight into the nature and production of Indian ...
In the final essay of his most recent book, The Turn to the Native: Studies in Criticism and Culture...
This book -- a major literary work by one of the more widely read early Native American authors, and...
Drawing on the life stories of Native Americans solicited by historians during the 19th century and,...
In Joan Mark\u27s introduction to the Bison edition of this classic work, she offers a good analysis...
A reviewer of Red Matters might reasonably expect a work with the post-colon title Native American S...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
American Indian and Alaska Native Newspapers and Periodicals, 1826-1924 is a timely and useful book,...
Often a piece of scholarly literature is intriguing not because it is completely right but because i...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...
In Sending My Heart Back Across the Years, Hertha Wong, an assistant professor of English at the Uni...
Review of: "Indians and Emigrants: Encounters on the Overland Trails," by Michael L. Tate
This is the second monograph on Native American autobiography, and together with Bataille and Sands\...
American Indian Autobiography provides significant insight into the nature and production of Indian ...
In the final essay of his most recent book, The Turn to the Native: Studies in Criticism and Culture...
This book -- a major literary work by one of the more widely read early Native American authors, and...
Drawing on the life stories of Native Americans solicited by historians during the 19th century and,...
In Joan Mark\u27s introduction to the Bison edition of this classic work, she offers a good analysis...
A reviewer of Red Matters might reasonably expect a work with the post-colon title Native American S...
Hollywood inherited conflicting myths of Native Americans: barbaric savages or Noble Savage. Influ...
American Indian and Alaska Native Newspapers and Periodicals, 1826-1924 is a timely and useful book,...
Often a piece of scholarly literature is intriguing not because it is completely right but because i...
Until very recently, Indian history existed in the doldrums of guilt and ethnocentric misunderstandi...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
Although numerous nonfiction works about American Indians fill juvenile sections of public libraries...
In Sending My Heart Back Across the Years, Hertha Wong, an assistant professor of English at the Uni...
Review of: "Indians and Emigrants: Encounters on the Overland Trails," by Michael L. Tate