The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature
Since the rise of the Native American Renaissance in literature and culture during the American civil rights period, a rich critical discourse has been developed to provide a range of interpretive frameworks for the study, recovery, and teaching of Native American literary and cultural production. For the past few decades the dominant framework has been nationalism, a critical perspective placing emphasis on specific tribal nations and nationalist concepts. While this nationalist intervention has produced important insights and questions regarding Native American literature, culture, and politics, it has not always attended to the important fact that Native texts and writers have also always been globalized. The World, the Text, and the Indian breaks from this framework by examining Native American literature not for its tribal-national significance but rather its connections to global, transnational, and cosmopolitan forces. Essays by leading scholars in the field assume that Native American literary and cultural production is global in character; even claims to sovereignty and self-determination are made in global contexts and influenced by global forces. Spanning from the nineteenth century to the present day, these analyses of theories, texts, and methods—from trans-indigenous to cosmopolitan, George Copway to Sherman Alexie, and indigenous feminism to book history—interrogate the dialects of global indigeneity and settler colonialism in literary and visual culture.
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The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature
Since the rise of the Native American Renaissance in literature and culture during the American civil rights period, a rich critical discourse has been developed to provide a range of interpretive frameworks for the study, recovery, and teaching of Native American literary and cultural production. For the past few decades the dominant framework has been nationalism, a critical perspective placing emphasis on specific tribal nations and nationalist concepts. While this nationalist intervention has produced important insights and questions regarding Native American literature, culture, and politics, it has not always attended to the important fact that Native texts and writers have also always been globalized. The World, the Text, and the Indian breaks from this framework by examining Native American literature not for its tribal-national significance but rather its connections to global, transnational, and cosmopolitan forces. Essays by leading scholars in the field assume that Native American literary and cultural production is global in character; even claims to sovereignty and self-determination are made in global contexts and influenced by global forces. Spanning from the nineteenth century to the present day, these analyses of theories, texts, and methods—from trans-indigenous to cosmopolitan, George Copway to Sherman Alexie, and indigenous feminism to book history—interrogate the dialects of global indigeneity and settler colonialism in literary and visual culture.
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The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature

The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature

by Scott Richard Lyons (Editor)
The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature

The World, the Text, and the Indian: Global Dimensions of Native American Literature

by Scott Richard Lyons (Editor)

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Overview

Since the rise of the Native American Renaissance in literature and culture during the American civil rights period, a rich critical discourse has been developed to provide a range of interpretive frameworks for the study, recovery, and teaching of Native American literary and cultural production. For the past few decades the dominant framework has been nationalism, a critical perspective placing emphasis on specific tribal nations and nationalist concepts. While this nationalist intervention has produced important insights and questions regarding Native American literature, culture, and politics, it has not always attended to the important fact that Native texts and writers have also always been globalized. The World, the Text, and the Indian breaks from this framework by examining Native American literature not for its tribal-national significance but rather its connections to global, transnational, and cosmopolitan forces. Essays by leading scholars in the field assume that Native American literary and cultural production is global in character; even claims to sovereignty and self-determination are made in global contexts and influenced by global forces. Spanning from the nineteenth century to the present day, these analyses of theories, texts, and methods—from trans-indigenous to cosmopolitan, George Copway to Sherman Alexie, and indigenous feminism to book history—interrogate the dialects of global indigeneity and settler colonialism in literary and visual culture.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438464466
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 03/27/2017
Series: SUNY series, Native Traces
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 346
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Scott Richard Lyons is Associate Professor of English and Director of Native American Studies at the University of Michigan and the author of X-Marks: Native Signatures of Assent.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Foreword
Jace Weaver

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Globalizing the Word
Scott Richard Lyons

1. Empire Treasons: White Earth and the Great War
Gerald Vizenor

2. Native American Literary Criticism in Global Context
Arnold Krupat

3. “Between Friends and Enemies”: Moving Books and Locating Native Critique in Early Colonial America
Matt Cohen

4. “The Search Engine”: Traversing the Local and the Global in the Native Archive
Phillip H. Round

5. Migrations to Modernity: The Many Voices of George Copway’s Running Sketches of Men and Places, in England, France, Germany, Belgium, and Scotland
Scott Richard Lyons

6. Emerging from the Background: Photographic Conventions, Stereotypes, and the Ordinariness of the Indian
Kate Flint

7. Reading Global Indigenous Resistance in Simon Ortiz’s Fight Back
Eric Cheyfitz

8. Productive Tensions: Trans/national, Trans-/Indigenous
Chadwick Allen

9. “The Right to Enjoy All Human Rights”: The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Potential for Decolonial Cosmopolitanism
Elvira Pulitano

Afterword
Shari M. Huhndorf

Contributors
Index
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