328 results on '"Native American literature"'
Search Results
2. Enduring Critical Poses: The Legacy and Life of Anishinaabe Literature and Letters.
3. Me Tomorrow: Indigenous Views on the Future.
4. Kelly Wisecup, Assembled for Use: Indigenous Compilation and the Archives of Early Native American Literatures.
5. Speaking for the People: Native Writing and the Question of Political Form.
6. The colonial construction of Indian country: Native American literatures and federal Indian law.
7. Assembled for Use: Indigenous Compilation and the Archives of Early Native American Literatures.
8. On Becoming Apache.
9. Kothari, Rita. Uneasy Translations: Self, Experience and Indian Literature.
10. Assembled for Use: Indigenous Compilation and the Archives of Early Native American Literatures. Kelly Wisecup.
11. Earthworks Rising: Mound Building in Native Literature and Arts.
12. Margin Speaks: Indian Dalit Literature. A Review of Writing as Resistance: Literature of Emancipation, ed. Jaydeep Sarangi (New Delhi: Gnosis, 2011).
13. India's contribution to humor and satire.
14. Formal Responses: Women and Native American Writers in the Nineteenth-Century Press.
15. Where in the world are Indian literatures?
16. Native American Mystery Writing: Indigenous Investigations.
17. Changed Forever, Volume 1: American Indian Boarding-School Literature. Arnold Krupat.
18. The Bungling Host: The Nature of Indigenous Oral Literature.
19. Recovering Native American Writings in the Boarding School Press. Edited by Jacqueline Emery.
20. Re-storying the Indigenous and the Popular Imaginary.
21. Re-Imagining Nature's Nation: Native American and Native Hawaiian Literature, Environment, and Empire.
22. George Sword's Warrior Narratives: Compositional Processes in Lakota Oral Tradition.
23. Why Indigenous Literatures Matter.
24. Journeys: a poet's diary.
25. Why Indigenous Literatures Matter.
26. WOMEN ETHNOGRAPHERS AND NATIVE WOMEN STORYTELLERS: RELATIONAL SCIENCE, ETHNOGRAPHIC COLLABORATION, AND TRIBAL COMMUNITY.
27. Twenty-First Century Perspectives on Indigenous Studies: Native North America in (Trans)Motion.
28. The Queerness of Native American Literature.
29. Why Indigenous Literatures Matter.
30. The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature.
31. Why Indigenous Literatures Matter.
32. Sovereignty and Sustainability: Indigenous Literary Stewardship in New England.
33. "That the People Might Live": Loss and Renewal in Native American Elegy/The Red Land to the South: American Indian Writers and Indigenous Mexico/Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping Our Nations....
34. The Red Land to the South: American Indian Writers and Indigenous Mexico.
35. Reconstructing the Native South: American Indian Literature and the Lost Cause.
36. The Native American Renaissance: Literary Imagination and Achievement.
37. Mark My Words: Native Women Mapping Our Nations.
38. Indigenous Cities: Urban Indian Fiction and the Histories of Relocation.
39. The Routledge Companion to Native American Literature.
40. George Sword's Warrior Narratives: Compositional Processes in Lakota Oral Tradition.
41. That Dream Shall Have a Name: Native Americans Rewriting America.
42. The Red Land to the South: American Indian Writers and Indigenous Mexico.
43. Trans-Indigenous: Methodologies for Global Native Literary Studies.
44. The Erotics of Sovereignty: Queer Native Writing in the Era of Self-Determination.
45. Decentering Rushdie: Cosmopolitanism and the Indian Novel in English.
46. Domestic Subjects: Gender, Citizenship, and Law in Native American Literature.
47. Removable Type: Histories of the Book in Indian Country, 1663-1880.
48. Trans-Indigenous: Methodologies for Global Native Literary Studies.
49. The Erotics of Sovereignty: Queer Native Writing in the Era of Self-Determination.
50. The Political Arrays of American Indian Literary History. By James H. Cox.
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