The subtitle of this collection raises a question: Is it wise to mix various genres and also authors from very different tribes and then to limit this mixture by the arbitrary geographical borders of a state
This volume collects work-in-progress of nine contemporary Native American authors, some already wid...
What difference would it make if literary regionalism were taken seriously? We would have an ambitio...
If we are to make valid critical interpretations of Native American literature, we must discover, o...
Brill de Ramirez\u27s work addresses at least two crucial issues that scholars of Native American li...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
American Indians are not conquered. The heart of the American Indian woman is not on the ground. In ...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
Studies in American Indian Literature edited by Paula Gunn Allen is an excellent literary survey and...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
In Mixedblood Messages: Literature, Film, Family, Place (1998), Louis Owens critiques a formative st...
This anthology of Native American legends is a fine supplement to the Erdoes and Ortiz work, America...
Writing Indian, Native Conversations provides keen discussion across three decades of Native America...
While Speak to Me Words: Essays on Contemporary American Indian Poetry is written primarily for lite...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
This volume collects work-in-progress of nine contemporary Native American authors, some already wid...
What difference would it make if literary regionalism were taken seriously? We would have an ambitio...
If we are to make valid critical interpretations of Native American literature, we must discover, o...
Brill de Ramirez\u27s work addresses at least two crucial issues that scholars of Native American li...
The red and black Chumash pictograph reproduced on the cover of Smoothing the Ground shows an alert ...
American Indians are not conquered. The heart of the American Indian woman is not on the ground. In ...
Through the lens of historical interpretation, Robert Dale Parker presents a controversial, deconstr...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
Studies in American Indian Literature edited by Paula Gunn Allen is an excellent literary survey and...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
In Mixedblood Messages: Literature, Film, Family, Place (1998), Louis Owens critiques a formative st...
This anthology of Native American legends is a fine supplement to the Erdoes and Ortiz work, America...
Writing Indian, Native Conversations provides keen discussion across three decades of Native America...
While Speak to Me Words: Essays on Contemporary American Indian Poetry is written primarily for lite...
Lee Irwin, whose earlier writing has focused on Plains Indian visionary traditions, has gathered fou...
This volume collects work-in-progress of nine contemporary Native American authors, some already wid...
What difference would it make if literary regionalism were taken seriously? We would have an ambitio...
If we are to make valid critical interpretations of Native American literature, we must discover, o...