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No. 15 Native American Literature: Boundaries & Sovereignties (2001)
Edited by Kathryn W. Shanley
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Table of Contents
“Born from the Need to Say”: Boundaries and Sovereignties in Native American Literary and Cultural Studies, pp 3-16 Kathryn W. Stanley
Paradoxa Interview with James Welch, pp 17-37 Kathryn W. Stanley
Revising the Captivity Narrative: Lost Bird of Wounded Knee, pp 38-48 Valerie Adamcyk
Maps Over the Face of God: Remapping Epistemologies in Linda Hogan’s Solar Storm, pp49-60 Ellen L. Arnold
Contest Common Ground: Cherokee Freedpeople’s National Identity and Land Ownership in the Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory, pp 61-74 Celia Naylor-Oijurongbe
The Transformational Tracks of a Marginalized Life, pp 75-85 Duane Niatum
Forging the Discursive Presence in Gerald Vizenor’s Manifest Manners: Postindian Warriors of Survivance, pp 86-97 Simona Fojtová
Leslie Marmon Silko’s Ceremony: A Different Kind of Captivity Narrative, pp 98-113 Peter Alan Froehlich & Joy Harris Philpott
Solemn Laughter: Humor as Subversion and Resistance in Simon Ortiz and Carter Revard, pp 114-131 Jane Haladay
Envisioning Anthropology: David MacDougall and the Next Culture, pp 132-145 Mark Ingram
Hearths and Minds: Violence and Domesticity in Hopi Life, pp 146-157 Jennifer Lei Jenkins
The Power of Kindship, pp 158-169 Roger Dunsmore
As If an Indian Were Really an Indian: Uramericans, Euramericans and Postcolonial Theory, pp 170-183 Louis Owens
A Multitude of Routes, Roads and Paths: Transcultural Healing in A.A. Carr’s Eye Killers, pp 184-197 Jesse Peters
Bodies of Memory and Forgetting: “Putting on Weight” in Leslie Marmon Silko’s Almanac of the Dead, pp 198-210 Beth Hege Piatote
Imagining a New Indian: Listening to the Rhetoric of Survivance in Charles Eastman’s From the Deep Woods to Civilization, pp 211-226 Malea Powell
“Sacred Thresholds”: Transformation and Liminality in the Novels of Linda Hogan, pp 227-240 Linda Palen Ruzich
Travelling the Hyperreality of Indian Simulations: Gerald Vizenor’s Darkness in Saint Louis Bearheart, pp 241-262 Elvira Pulitano
Towards a Tribal-Centered Reading of Native Literature: Using Indigenous Rhetoric(s) Instead of Literary Analysis, pp 263-274 Kimberly Roppolo
Wisdom of the Elders, pp 275-278 Kimberly Roppolo
Indian Academics Must Speak for Themselves, pp 279 Geary Hobson
More than Intellectual Exploration, pp 280 P. Jane Hafen
To Native Scholars Just Starting Out, pp 281 Jeane Breinig
Sharing with Native Communities and Elders, pp 282 Clifford E. Trafzer
Academe as Indian Country, pp 283-285 Carol Miller
Part and Whole: Dangerous Bifurcations, pp 286 Louis Owens
No More Free Rides, pp 287 Vine Deloria
Review of The Insistence of the Indian: Race and Nationalism in 19th Century America Culture, pp. 288-291 Martha Barter
Review of Leslie Marmon Silko: A Collection of Critical Essays, pp 292-296 Susan Bernardin
Review of The Voice of the Dawn: An Autohistory of the Abenaki Nation, pp 297-299 Andrew Denson
Review of The Rock Island Hiking Club: Poems by Ray A. Young Bear, pp 300-305 Robert F. Gish
Review of Louise Erdrich, A Critical Companion, pp 306-309 Carol Miller
Review of Coyote Kills John Wayne, pp 310-312 Jace Weaver