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Showing 31 to 45 of 564 results Save | Export
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Sheley, Nancy Strow; Zitzer-Comfort, Carol – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2011
In the spring of 2008, university students enrolled in courses at California State University, Long Beach (CSULB), and the University of Cyprus (UCY) participated in a cross-cultural e-learning project in which they studied American Indian literature and history. All students followed the same six-week syllabus, which included shared readings and…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Foreign Countries
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Ladino, Jennifer K. – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2009
Despite the fact that more than two-thirds of American Indians live in urban areas, many readers and scholars of American Indian literature continue to associate Indigenous peoples with natural environments rather than urban ones. Highlighting literary texts written by Native authors that reflect the multifaceted dimensions of urban Indian life is…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indians, American Indian Education, Cultural Pluralism
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Li, Stephanie – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2009
Leslie Marmon Silko began her most recent work, "Gardens in the Dunes" (1999), intending to write a novel that would not be political. Following the publication of "Almanac of the Dead" (1992), which was simultaneously hailed as one of the most important books of the twentieth century and condemned for its angry self-righteousness, Silko…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Novels, Gardening, Mothers
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Roppolo, Kimberly – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
American Indian cultures tend to be right hemispheric because of the ways in which they acquire knowledge. Over the thousands of years that American Indian peoples have lived in this hemisphere, strong visual rhetorics were developed, because of this tendency to engage in visual thinking and the socioeconomic need to communicate with others who…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, Visualization, American Indian Culture
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Belcher, Wendy – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
Sherman Alexie's "Reservation Blues" has inspired both admiration and castigation. Critics such as Stephen Evans, Adrian C. Louis, Joseph Coulombe, and James Cox have praised Alexie's satiric upending of stereotypes about Native Americans, claiming that Alexie's work "uses stereotypes...of the...Indian, in new and entirely moral and ethical ways."…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Literature, Stereotypes, Literary Styles
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Jepson, Jill – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
William Bevis has argued that, whereas the classic American novel tells a story of "leaving," in which characters find growth and fulfillment away from the homes they grew up in, the typical Native American novel is based around "homing." In homing stories, the characters do not "find themselves" through independence but rather discover value and…
Descriptors: Novels, Literature, American Indian Literature, Community
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Bahr, Donald – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
One of the best-studied, least-discussed texts of Native American oral literature is a long Mojave "epic" taken down from a man named Inyo-kutavere by Alfred Kroeber in 1902 and published in 1951. The text was published in twenty-nine pages along with forty-eight pages of commentary and twenty-five pages of notes. In 1999, Arthur Hatto, an…
Descriptors: United States Literature, Philosophy, American Indian Literature, Oral Tradition
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Toth, Margaret A. – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2007
In this article, the author proposes a model educators can apply when teaching one text, Louise Erdrich's "The Bingo Palace"; while she emphasizes the particular concerns this text raises, she aims, simultaneously, to offer a more general approach to teaching American Indian literature responsibly. In an increasingly multicultural academic…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Novels, Teaching Models, Teacher Responsibility
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Kirwan, Padraig – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
David Treuer's 1997 novel, "The Hiawatha," engages the traditional literary strategies employed by Native American writing, compares those strategies to earlier narratives (Native American and canonically American), offers a reassessment of indigenous novelistic structures, engages critical responses to tribal fiction, and does so in response to…
Descriptors: United States Literature, American Indian Literature, Novels, Comparative Analysis
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Turk, Diana B.; Klein, Emily; Dickstein, Shari – History Teacher, 2007
In this article, the authors offer a series of strategies to help teachers integrate literature into their history and social studies classrooms without losing the flavor or essence of either the literature they are using or the history they are trying to teach. None of the presented approaches is mutually exclusive of the others, and several may…
Descriptors: Social Studies, History Instruction, Literature, Fiction
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Haladay, Jane – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2007
This essay is just one story in the ongoing conversation of how to approach teaching indigenous literatures in colonial educational institutions. Through sharing her experiences in teaching Richard Van Camp's "The Lesser Blessed," the author hopes to reveal the power of this particular text and the way its effects on students who…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Novels, Teaching Methods, College Students
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Dyck, Reginald – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2007
Petroglyphs can help students confront the challenges of cross-cultural interpretation, the "perilous venture" the author and his students will face in their Native American Literature course. Cultural artifacts, carved in rock or printed on paper, are a part of particular discursive systems. In this article, the author wants his…
Descriptors: News Reporting, Maps, Ideology, Genetics
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Dean, Janet – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2008
At the close of Sherman Alexie's "Indian Killer," in a final chapter titled "Creation Story," a killer carries a backpack containing, among other things, "dozens of owl feathers, a scrapbook, and two bloody scalps in a plastic bag." Readers schooled in the psychopathologies of real and fictional serial killers will be familiar with the detail:…
Descriptors: Violence, American Indians, Archives, Novels
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Larson, Sidner – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
James Welch's "Winter in the Blood" (1974) and "The Death of Jim Loney" (1979) are excellent examples of work that remains essentially misunderstood throughout some three decades of interpretation. Attempts to define these two books in terms of mainstream modernism notwithstanding, they represent a phenomenon not unlike aspects of American folk…
Descriptors: American Indians, Book Reviews, Literary Criticism, Didacticism
Charles, Jim – Peter Lang New York, 2007
This book is an introduction to the literature and art of American writer N. Scott Momaday, winner of the 1969 Pulitzer Prize and member of the Kiowa American Indian Tribe. The book describes the impact of Momaday's family, Kiowa heritage, Pueblo cultural experiences, and academic preparation on his worldview, poetry, novels, essays, children's…
Descriptors: American Indians, Authors, Artists, American Indian Literature
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