Indian reservations are territories within the United States recognized by the federal government as land reserved specifically for American Indians. Indigenous communities still referred to as tribes have some autonomy over the reserved lands, which allow tribes freedom to maintain and preserve cultural heritage. Indian reservations are societies within the larger mainstream America, making physical and social boundaries problematic for cross-cultural exchange. Indian writer Sherman Alexie challenges the misrepresentations of Indians which originated from a EuroAmerican perspective of the "outside looking in" to these cultures. Sherman Alexie presents the Indian perspective of "looking out" at mainstream society. Rather than evoking a...
The paper discusses Sherman Alexie's 2007 novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian with...
La colección de relatos The Toughest Indian in the World (2000) de Sherman Alexie ofrece uno de los ...
As the world continues to move away from rural forms of living, so too do Native Americans struggle ...
Indian reservations are territories within the United States recognized by the federal government as...
Sherman Alexie\u27s depiction of Indian identity has paralleled his own constantly changing definiti...
Sherman Alexie is an acclaimed Native American author who writes about growing up on the Spokane Ind...
This dissertation is dedicated largely to the contradictory nature of what the literary reservation ...
The aim of the thesis is to analyze the themes of collective trauma, poverty, violence, alcoholism, ...
This paper proposes the notion that early Native American autobiographical writings from such author...
Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues, as one of the most important literary works written by a Native ...
William Yellow Robe Jr.’s Where the Pavement Ends: Five Native American Plays is his representative ...
This thesis reads the fiction and poetry of Spokane/Coeur d’Alene writer Sherman Alexie as predomin...
The purpose of this article is to discuss the idea of an Indian identity and the Native American Dre...
This research is conducted to explain the contribution of Sherman Alexie in constructing Native Amer...
This thesis aims to analyse the portrayal of Native American people in a semi-autobiographic novel T...
The paper discusses Sherman Alexie's 2007 novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian with...
La colección de relatos The Toughest Indian in the World (2000) de Sherman Alexie ofrece uno de los ...
As the world continues to move away from rural forms of living, so too do Native Americans struggle ...
Indian reservations are territories within the United States recognized by the federal government as...
Sherman Alexie\u27s depiction of Indian identity has paralleled his own constantly changing definiti...
Sherman Alexie is an acclaimed Native American author who writes about growing up on the Spokane Ind...
This dissertation is dedicated largely to the contradictory nature of what the literary reservation ...
The aim of the thesis is to analyze the themes of collective trauma, poverty, violence, alcoholism, ...
This paper proposes the notion that early Native American autobiographical writings from such author...
Sherman Alexie’s Reservation Blues, as one of the most important literary works written by a Native ...
William Yellow Robe Jr.’s Where the Pavement Ends: Five Native American Plays is his representative ...
This thesis reads the fiction and poetry of Spokane/Coeur d’Alene writer Sherman Alexie as predomin...
The purpose of this article is to discuss the idea of an Indian identity and the Native American Dre...
This research is conducted to explain the contribution of Sherman Alexie in constructing Native Amer...
This thesis aims to analyse the portrayal of Native American people in a semi-autobiographic novel T...
The paper discusses Sherman Alexie's 2007 novel The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian with...
La colección de relatos The Toughest Indian in the World (2000) de Sherman Alexie ofrece uno de los ...
As the world continues to move away from rural forms of living, so too do Native Americans struggle ...