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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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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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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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Weagel, Deborah – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2007
Quilts have become a part of American Indian culture, and they are mentioned and even highlighted in certain works of contemporary Native American literature. Certain questions can be posed in regard to the inclusion of quilt references in contemporary American Indian novels. Do the quilts and the making of quilts have some type of metaphorical…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indian Culture, American Indians, American Indian Education
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Andrews, Scott – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2004
In her book "The Remasculinization of America," Susan Jeffords discusses the dynamics of how differences such as race and class are erased in filmic and literary representations of the Vietnam War. She asserts that one difference is not overcome by the battlefield: gender, a barrier that is depicted in the literature as natural and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, United States Literature, Race, Racial Differences