Conceptualizing American Indian Literary Theory Today

In fact the most influential works of Native American literary studies in the past ten years or so have as their common denominator their expressed goal of clarifying not just the connections but the responsibilities that Native writers, Native writings, Native communities, and critics of Native lit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Studies in American Indian literatures 2007-12, Vol.19 (4), p.175-183
1. Verfasser: TEUTON, CHRISTOPHER B.
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container_title Studies in American Indian literatures
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description In fact the most influential works of Native American literary studies in the past ten years or so have as their common denominator their expressed goal of clarifying not just the connections but the responsibilities that Native writers, Native writings, Native communities, and critics of Native literature all share. Terms such as Robert Warrior's "intellectual sovereignty," and, recentiy, "intellectual trade routes"; Jace Weaver's "communitism"; Elizabeth Cook-Lynn's "AntiIndianism"; Craig Womack's "Red Stick" approach; all these terms, which are the markers of literary theoretical concepts, are unintelligible outside of the context of Native community history, politics, and needs (Cook-Lynn x; Warrior, People and the Word 182 and Tribal secrets 97-98; Weaver xiii; Womack 11-12).
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Administrator Surveys
Aesthetics
American Indians
American literature
Authors
Blogs
Colonial literature
Communities
Community
Community Relations
Critics
Fiction
Indigenous Knowledge
Indigenous Populations
Literary Criticism
Literary theory
Literature
Literature Appreciation
Local History
Morrison, Toni (1931-2019)
Native Americans
Native literature
Novelists
Oral Tradition
Politics
Special Section
Studies
Theory
Tribes
Writers
Writing
title Conceptualizing American Indian Literary Theory Today
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