Roanoke and Wampum: Topics in Native American Heritage and LiteraturesPeter Lang, 2001 - 255 pagina's Roanoke and Wampum: Topics in Native American Heritage and Literatures focuses on the discourses about selected legacies and writings predominantly of eastern Native North America. Ron Welburn skillfully approaches diverse subjects through scholarly and personal modes. More specifically, the book begins with the author reflecting on the sign talk of fifties television's Pahoo-Ka-Ta-Wah, and it concludes with a discussion of a narrative by thirties Chippewa author Thomas Whitecloud. Other essays inquire about the southeastern Blackfoot, Jeffrey Amherst, and literary theories. Still others discuss Indian slaves, the Great Seal of the United States, Mildred Haun's Melungeon novel, and nineteenth-century Indian interviewers. A section on William Apess features poetry and a scholarly essay. |
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Pagina 199
... ( Dawn Land 183 ) . Young Hunter too has the gift of seeing deeply into the implications of the future of the Only People , and realizes he must assume responsibilities to protect them . In Dawn Land this means traveling west- ward to ...
... ( Dawn Land 183 ) . Young Hunter too has the gift of seeing deeply into the implications of the future of the Only People , and realizes he must assume responsibilities to protect them . In Dawn Land this means traveling west- ward to ...
Pagina 201
... Dawn Land and Long River would seem to appeal to juvenile tastes or a young adult readership , Conley's super- ficially similar approach suggests his appeal to the grassroots reader . Bruchac's popularity with educators , for one , and ...
... Dawn Land and Long River would seem to appeal to juvenile tastes or a young adult readership , Conley's super- ficially similar approach suggests his appeal to the grassroots reader . Bruchac's popularity with educators , for one , and ...
Pagina 202
... ( Dawn Land 22 ) . Conley also portrays fairly the priests ' leader Standing - in - the - Doorway by not making his homosexual love for his chosen apprentice Two Heads ( née Acorn ) a catalyst to his abuse of power . Implicit to Dawn Land ...
... ( Dawn Land 22 ) . Conley also portrays fairly the priests ' leader Standing - in - the - Doorway by not making his homosexual love for his chosen apprentice Two Heads ( née Acorn ) a catalyst to his abuse of power . Implicit to Dawn Land ...
Inhoudsopgave
A Good Word about X Brandss Discourses in Sign | 3 |
Who Are the Southeastern Blackfoot? | 9 |
Historicisms | 25 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Abenaki African African Americans American Indian Ani-Kutani arrows Autobiography Black Hawk Blackfeet Blackfoot Blacksnake Bouquet Bruchac Carolina century Cherokee Christian clan Cocke County colonial Colrain Conley Conley's critical cultural dark Dawn Land Deadwood Lighter Delaware describes discourse eastern ecocriticism ecological Ecuyer Edohi England English episode essay European experience Fort Pitt Garcilosa Haithcock Haun Haun's Henry Bouquet heritage historians homelands identity indigenous fiction interviews Iroquois issue Jeffery Amherst Journal Kennedy Lakota language literary literature living Massachusetts meaning Melungeons Mooney narrative narrator Nations Native American never novel Occaneechi Ohio oral history origins Patterson and Dougall Pawnee Pequot postcolonial priests readers recorded resistance Saponi Seneca signifies Sihasapa Siouan Sioux slaves smallpox social South southeastern Blackfoot Spanish spiritual Squani stories survival swamp Thomson Timucua traditional transcribed translation tribal tribes Turkish Tutelo Valley Forge Virginia Wampanoag Wampy western Whitecloud William Apess Williams's writing York Young