The article examines the representation of Native American urban identity in Theodore Van Alst’s Sacred Smokes (2018) and Tommy Orange’s There There (2018). Drawing upon Stuart Hall’s and James Clifford’s theories of identity and diaspora and Robert Young’s distinction between the “organic” and the “diasporizing” modes of hybridity, it analyzes hybrid strategies through which these texts define their characters’ complex diasporic experience and extend the literary tradition of “survivance.” The paper argues that by exploring the concepts of history, community, and home and by emphasizing the narrative, imaginative, and relational aspects of their characters’ traveling identities, Van Alst’s and Orange’s texts remain strongly rooted in Nativ...
Rachel Brahinsky uses the Toni Morrison\u27s ideas of map-making and place to consider Oakland as th...
The term ‘Fellaheen’ is used in On the Road to collectively refer to marginalized ethnic groups. My ...
This thesis reads the fiction and poetry of Spokane/Coeur d’Alene writer Sherman Alexie as predomin...
Native American writers in the United States have often used literature to celebrate their communiti...
Using the novel as a source of inspiration, USF faculty across the university were invited to provid...
By writing this paper I was able to further analyze Tony Loneman\u27s character and role in the nove...
Growing up in a gang in the city can be dark. Growing up Native American in a gang in Chicago is a w...
There There, Cheyenne and Arapaho writer Tommy Orange’s first novel, has been praised as "an astonis...
Tanu Sankalia explores American Indian urban spatial imaginary in Tommy Orange\u27s There There thro...
Samira Abdur-Rahman looks at how Native children and youth develop their identities in Tommy Orange\...
Tommy Orange\u27s There There shows the impact that American governmental policies have had on Nativ...
This article explores the socio-political background that led to widespread Native American urban re...
This essay argues that Tommy Orange’s 2018 novel There There works to craft new spaces for a revised...
Rick Ayers explores the layers of community and place in Oakland and how Tommy Orange\u27s There The...
This article offers a transcultural reading of the issues of cultural trauma and mobility in Daniel ...
Rachel Brahinsky uses the Toni Morrison\u27s ideas of map-making and place to consider Oakland as th...
The term ‘Fellaheen’ is used in On the Road to collectively refer to marginalized ethnic groups. My ...
This thesis reads the fiction and poetry of Spokane/Coeur d’Alene writer Sherman Alexie as predomin...
Native American writers in the United States have often used literature to celebrate their communiti...
Using the novel as a source of inspiration, USF faculty across the university were invited to provid...
By writing this paper I was able to further analyze Tony Loneman\u27s character and role in the nove...
Growing up in a gang in the city can be dark. Growing up Native American in a gang in Chicago is a w...
There There, Cheyenne and Arapaho writer Tommy Orange’s first novel, has been praised as "an astonis...
Tanu Sankalia explores American Indian urban spatial imaginary in Tommy Orange\u27s There There thro...
Samira Abdur-Rahman looks at how Native children and youth develop their identities in Tommy Orange\...
Tommy Orange\u27s There There shows the impact that American governmental policies have had on Nativ...
This article explores the socio-political background that led to widespread Native American urban re...
This essay argues that Tommy Orange’s 2018 novel There There works to craft new spaces for a revised...
Rick Ayers explores the layers of community and place in Oakland and how Tommy Orange\u27s There The...
This article offers a transcultural reading of the issues of cultural trauma and mobility in Daniel ...
Rachel Brahinsky uses the Toni Morrison\u27s ideas of map-making and place to consider Oakland as th...
The term ‘Fellaheen’ is used in On the Road to collectively refer to marginalized ethnic groups. My ...
This thesis reads the fiction and poetry of Spokane/Coeur d’Alene writer Sherman Alexie as predomin...