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Haladay, Jane; Hicks, Scott; Jacobs, Mary Ann; Savage, Tamara Estes – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2022
The University of North Carolina at Pembroke, a historically American Indian university that is experiencing major climate change impacts from hurricanes, was the setting for four service-learning projects seeking to advance sustainability in a racially diverse community. Courses in American Indian Studies, English, and Social Work, in…
Descriptors: Service Learning, American Indian Education, Minority Serving Institutions, Social Problems
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Saddam, Widad Allawi; Ya, Wan Roselezam Wan – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2015
Native American storytelling has become a very vital issue in education. It preserves Native American history for the next generation and teaches them important lessons about the Native American culture. It also conveys moral meanings, knowledge and social values of the Native American people to the universe. More importantly, Native American…
Descriptors: American Indians, Story Telling, Poetry, Oral Tradition
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San Pedro, Timothy; Carlos, Elijah; Mburu, Jane – Urban Education, 2017
Relying on the intersections of Indigenous Research Methodologies and Humanizing Research, the authors of this article argue that by re-centering relationships through critical listening and storying, we are better suited to co-construct our shared truths and realities in the space between the telling and hearing of stories. As we do so, we move…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Listening Skills, Story Telling, American Indian Literature
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Peters, Jesse – American Indian Quarterly, 2013
In her novel "Power," Linda Hogan provides readers with a close look at how separatism and syncretism, or exclusion and inclusion, are complex ideologies that lead to complex decisions. A close look at the novel reveals that the tensions and sharp dichotomies between the traditional world of the Taiga elders and the European American world,…
Descriptors: Novels, American Indian Literature, American Indians, Ideology
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Young, Teresa; Henderson, Darwin L. – Journal of Children's Literature, 2013
Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve, a former English teacher and school counselor, is an award-winning author, best known for her children's books about the Rosebud Sioux life and culture, which combines history and legend to create culturally rich and authentic Native American stories. In this article, the authors share their conversations with Virginia…
Descriptors: Authors, American Indian Literature, Childrens Literature, Books
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Portillo, Annette – CEA Forum, 2013
As a reflection on pedagogy, this essay seeks to provide strategic tools for teaching Native American literature and culture to non-native students. My teaching philosophy is informed by the indigenous-centered, decolonial methodologies as defined by Devon Mihesuah who calls for "indigenizing" the academy by challenging the status quo…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Literature, American Indian History, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Black, Jason Edward – Communication Teacher, 2013
This essay derives from a course called ‘"The Rhetoric of Native America,’" which is a historical-critical survey of Native American primary texts. The course examines the rhetoric employed by Natives to enact social change and to build community in the face of exigencies. The main goal of exploring a native text (particularly, Simon…
Descriptors: American Indians, Rhetoric, Social Change, American Indian Culture
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Mott, Rick – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2011
Many students the author has taught get frustrated when they read Leslie Silko's canonical Native American novel, "Ceremony". Not only do they struggle with Silko's disruptions of linear temporality and her collapsing of binary oppositions, but they also struggle with the novel's geographic and cultural location. To help students better…
Descriptors: Video Technology, American Indians, Geographic Location, Novels
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Eigenbrod, Renate – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2010
The author's two main arguments in her discussion include: teaching and researching Native literatures within the disciplinary context of Native Studies enhances the understanding of these texts; vice versa, Native writers address topics that are intrinsic components in epistemological processes of decolonization promoted in a Native Studies…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Culture, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Relevance
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Hollenberg, Alexander – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2009
To speak about separatism as a Canadian is to use a loaded term, one that invokes a significant yet historically specific sociocultural moment. Winners and losers emerged, and in the process, the word "separatism" received a bad rap. Consequently, as a white Canadian who still believes in at least the optimism of the multiculturalist…
Descriptors: American Indians, American Indian Literature, American Indian Culture, Ethnicity
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Iovannone, J. James – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2009
Louise Erdrich's early poem "The Strange People" portrays a dynamic understanding of gender echoed in many of her later fictive works. Narrated by a speaker who is half antelope, half woman, the poem details the relationship between a masculine hunter and his feminine prey. The poem suggests that gender is experienced as a wound, a site of…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Sex Role, Sexual Identity, Novels
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Treuer, David – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2011
In this paper, the author begins by saying how privileged he feels to be included in the celebration of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal (AICRJ) and to toast forty years of American Indian studies at UCLA. He looks back over the field of Native American literature and criticism, then peeks at the present, and last, makes some…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indian Studies, American Indian Culture, American Indians
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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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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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