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Peer reviewedWillard, William – WICAZO SA Review, 1995
Traces the development of Native American literatures as following a pattern of cultural revitalization. Examines how these literatures are being incorporated into the national literary canon and subjected to institutionalized domination at the same time that they are serving as a vehicle for indigenous political resistance and revitalization. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Authors, Cultural Maintenance, Higher Education
Bruchac, Joseph – Northeast Indian Quarterly, 1990
Describes major functions of Iroquois storytelling, including entertainment, taking the listener out of the present moment, and informal education of children. Discusses the attributes and roles of contemporary Iroquois storytellers. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, Informal Education, Story Telling
Peer reviewedJacobs, Connie A. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2004
Leslie Marmon Silko physically locates the climax of the novel, Ceremony at Canoncito, southeast of the Jackpile Uranium Mine, and so metaphorically correlates this site with witchery. The novel is ultimately the story of Tayo, and how he must restore harmony between the land and his people.
Descriptors: Novels, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Authors
White, John – Weewish Tree, 1979
This ancient Cherokee story details an encounter the Indians had with a strange beast after they misused nature thereby learning to respect the Creator. (RTS)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Animal Behavior, Childrens Literature
Ortiz, Alfonso – American Indian Journal, 1978
Presenting a brief biographical profile of D'Arcy McNickle, this article is written as a tribute to McNickle and his contributions to the emergence of American Indian literature. (JC)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Biographical Inventories, Leadership
Peer reviewedRuppert, Jim – American Indian Quarterly, 1983
The different ways in which two American Indian poets, Paula Gunn Allen and Joy Harjo, realize the fusion of the individual, the Southwest landscape, and a sensibility about the nature of existence in a realm called "mythic space" is clarified by showing how each approaches the concept of the moon. (SB)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Comparative Analysis, Literary Styles
Peer reviewedPeyer, Bernd – American Indian Quarterly, 1982
One of the first Native American authors, Samson Occom, a Mohegan Indian, began writing in the 18th century. His writings included an ethnographic essay on the Montauk Tribe, an autobiographical sketch of his educational experiences and missionary activities, and his first publication, "Sermon at the Execution of Moses Paul." (ERB)
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Authors
Peer reviewedTheisz, R. D. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1981
Because editors generally clarify the collaborative process used to produce "as-told-to" autobiographies of Native American people in the introductory section, an understanding of the handling of the issues which usually appear in introductions can be helpful to understanding Native American bi-autobiographies. (CM)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Autobiographies
Whirlwind Soldier, Merrill; Geerlings, Barbara – Weewish Tree, 1979
The American Indian oral tradition is presented in this article on the Omaha tribe's Rabbit Dance. (RTS)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Animals, Childrens Literature
Weewish Tree, 1979
This article presents the Abenaki version of their "discovery of the earth" and the origin of their one god, Katahdin. (RTS)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, Animal Behavior, Childrens Literature
Peer reviewedHailey, David E., Jr. – WICAZO SA Review, 1990
Examines apparent aberrations in the visual structure of the story-poems in Leslie Silko's "Ceremony." Suggests that the poems' texts act as skeletons for a series of illustrations that reflect the texts' content and provide the final ingredient necessary for "Ceremony" to become a ceremony--the invisible spirit helpers. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices
Peer reviewedGardner, Ethel B. – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 1988
Presents a modern retelling of a St:lo (Coast Salish) legend about the origin of a tribal treasure, the wondrous Sxwaixwe mask. Discusses the legend's origins, the process of transforming essentially oral sources into an accessible contemporary form, and the educational value of storytelling. Contains 13 references. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Literature, Canada Natives, Legends
Peer reviewedHill, Walter Mark – Youth Theatre Journal, 1991
Describes the Flint Youth Theatre's presentation of Saphira Linden's "Tribe," which was sponsored by A World of Difference, a prejudice awareness and reduction organization. Describes the project's treatment of the North American Indian theme, the involvement of Flint, Michigan's North American Indian community, and the process of…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Cultural Awareness, Drama, Elementary Secondary Education
Warrior, Robert – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2004
William Apess is among a number of Native intellectuals from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to whom scholars have paid increasing attention over the past decade and more. Apess was raised in the crucible of Native New England, had been abused in various ways in it, and spent his adulthood giving voice to those who experienced the…
Descriptors: Death, Biographies, Authors, American Indians
Peer reviewedTreuer, David – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2005
The structure of "Love Medicines" interpreted by Hertha D. Sweet Wong who claims that the book's "multiple narrators confound conventional Western expectations of an autonomous protagonist, a dominant narrative voice, and a consistently chronological narrative". "Love Medicine" is a brilliant use of the Western literary tactics that create the…
Descriptors: Literary Styles, Personal Narratives, Cultural Influences, American Indian Literature

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