Synopses & Reviews
Early Native American Writing is a collection of critical essays discussing the works of American Indian authors who wrote between 1630 and 1940 and produced some of the earliest literature in North American history. The first collection of critical essays that concentrates on this body of writing, this book highlights the writings of the American Indian authors considered, many only recently rediscovered, as important contributions to American letters.
Synopsis
A collection of essays discussing early American Indian authors.
Synopsis
This is a collection of critical essays discussing the works of American Indian authors who wrote between 1630 and 1940. The first collection of critical essays that concentrates on this body of writing, the book highlights these authors as important contributors to American letters.
Synopsis
This collection of critical essays discusses the works of American Indian authors who wrote between 1630 and 1940, producing some of the earliest literature in North American history. It highlights the writings of many American Indian authors only recently rediscovered.
Table of Contents
1. 'Honoratissimi Benefactores': Native American students and two seventeenth-century texts in the university tradition Wolfgang Hochbruck and Beatrix Dudensing Reichel; 2. 'Pray, Sir, consider a little': rituals of subordination and strategies of resistance in the letters of Hezekiah Calvin and David Fowler to Eleazer Wheelock Laura J. Murray; 3. '(I speak like a fool but I am constrained): Samson Occom's Short Narrative and economies of the racial self Dana D. Nelson; 4. Where, Then, Shall We Place the Hero of the Wilderness?: William Apess's Eulogy on King Philip and doctrines of racial destiny Anne Marie Dannenberg; 5. 'They ought to enjoy the home of their fathers': the Treaty of 1838, Seneca Intellectualism, and Literary Genesis Daniel F. Littlefield, Jr; 6.' I am Joaquin!': Space and freedom in Yellow Bird's The Life and Adventures of Joaquin Murieta, the Celebrated California Bandit John Lowe; 7. This Voluminous Unwritten Book of Ours: early Native American writers and oral tradition William M. Clements; 8. 'A terrible sickness among them': Smallpox and stories of the Frontier Helen Jaskoski; 9. 'A desirable citizen, a practical business man': G. W. Grayson - Creek mixed blood, nationalist, and autobiographer Robert F. Sayre; 10. An Indian ... an American: ethnicity, assimilation and balance in Charles Eastman's From the Deep Woods to Civilization Eric Peterson; 11. 'Overcoming all obstacles': the assimilation debate in Native American women's journalism of the Dawes era Carol Batker; 12. 'My people ... my kind': Mourning Dove's Cogewa, the Half-Blood as a narrative of mixed descent Martha L. Viehmann; 13. 'Because I understand the storytelling art': the evolution of D'Arcy McNicle's The Surrounded Birgit Hans.