One of the best ways to introduce readers to the diversity of Indian literatures (and, by implication, Indian experiences) is to expose them to poetry written in English by Indians. One-dimensional stereotypes about Nobel Savages simply cannot withstand the rich variety of a literature that extends at least back to the 19th-century attempts of a few Indian poets-such as William Wilson (Anishinabe), Emily Pauline Johnson (Mohawk), and Alexander Posey (Creek)-to imitate and modify English language poetic models up through the recent poems of hundreds of Indian writers whose backgrounds and poetic inclinations reflect numerous tribal, reservation, and urban experiences, as well as literary influences ranging from tribal chants and Japanese syl...
The author of Change in American Indian World Views ... is not only a teacher and student of poetr...
Some of today\u27s best writing is by Native American authors. That fact is not as widely known as i...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...
William Oandasan, a member of the Uki [Yuki] tribe, demonstrates the tension between the new and the...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
Poetry by American Indians may be traced to the writings of John Rollin Ridge, a Cherokee who came t...
This is a collection of contemporary American Indian poetry in which the total effort is a result of...
For the reader new to the field, perhaps attracted by an encounter with an individual poem or poet, ...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
A Contemporary Tribe of Poets Kenneth Lincoln I weave the night, I cross the weft with stars and the...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
Ian Smart has made, as he himself asserts in the Author\u27s Foreword, a very limited approach to ...
California\u27s fertile San Joaquin Valley is the setting of this first published collection of poem...
Good writing transcends boundaries, says Robert Franklin Gish in this cross-cultural inquiry into An...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
The author of Change in American Indian World Views ... is not only a teacher and student of poetr...
Some of today\u27s best writing is by Native American authors. That fact is not as widely known as i...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...
William Oandasan, a member of the Uki [Yuki] tribe, demonstrates the tension between the new and the...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
Poetry by American Indians may be traced to the writings of John Rollin Ridge, a Cherokee who came t...
This is a collection of contemporary American Indian poetry in which the total effort is a result of...
For the reader new to the field, perhaps attracted by an encounter with an individual poem or poet, ...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
A Contemporary Tribe of Poets Kenneth Lincoln I weave the night, I cross the weft with stars and the...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
Ian Smart has made, as he himself asserts in the Author\u27s Foreword, a very limited approach to ...
California\u27s fertile San Joaquin Valley is the setting of this first published collection of poem...
Good writing transcends boundaries, says Robert Franklin Gish in this cross-cultural inquiry into An...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
The author of Change in American Indian World Views ... is not only a teacher and student of poetr...
Some of today\u27s best writing is by Native American authors. That fact is not as widely known as i...
Scholars of the American Indian experience should read this book. These three authors discuss more i...