Learning `the language the presidents speak': Images and issues of literacy in American Indian
Tags: AMERICAN literature -- Indian authors
Related Articles
- Native Americans ride to the fore. Dahlin, Robert // Publishers Weekly;12/11/1995, Vol. 242 Issue 50, p50
Focuses on the American Indian book market. Resurgence of interest in everything from spirituality and medicine to crafts and history; American web of societal tribulation and triumph; American Indian storytelling art; Children's books.
- Native American Indian literature: Critical metaphors of the ghost dance. Vizenor, Gerald // World Literature Today;Spring92, Vol. 66 Issue 2, p223
Probes into the characters of the Native American Indian literature arising from tragic wisdom, a tribal sense of comic atavism or the communal pleasures of chance and ironies in stories and trickster discourse. Trickster characterization; Burdens of erroneous interpretations of tribal...
- Identity, voice, and authority: Artist-audience relations in Native American literature. Wiget, Andrew // World Literature Today;Spring92, Vol. 66 Issue 2, p258
Discusses the problems of expressing artistic authority in the Native American literature. Representation of the Native American culture through the author's literary authority; Historical background on the problem of artistic authority; Phenomenon of engrossment; Achievement of Leslie Silko's...
- American Indian literature in the nineties: The emergence of the middle-class protagonist. Velie, Alan R. // World Literature Today;Spring92, Vol. 66 Issue 2, p264
Focuses on the American Indian literature published in the 1990s and expresses criticisms over the characters played by the protagonists. Issue of Abel's alcoholism in `House Made of Dawn'; Nameless hero of `Winter in the Blood'; Depiction of Indian ethnic experience; Issue discussed in Leslie...
- On reading difference. Abu-Jaber, Diana // Ploughshares;Fall90, Vol. 16 Issue 2/3, p20
Discusses the author's reasons for reading Native American literature in her capacity as teacher and writer. Circumscription of precision of language; Empathy for the displaced and dispossessed; Illusion of translation.
- Reading American Indian intellectual traditions. Warrior, Robert Allen // World Literature Today;Spring92, Vol. 66 Issue 2, p236
Focuses on the elements of the American Indian intellectual history that may provide vital insights to Native literatures, political history and the cultural position of American Indian intellectuals and their written production. Efforts of Sioux physician Charles Eastman to defend the Pine...
- News Briefs. // School Library Journal;Jan79, Vol. 25 Issue 5, p13
Reports on the resolution passed by the National Council of Teachers of English supporting the teaching of Native American literature and cultures from kindergarten through college.
- Culturally Speaking: Contemporary Native Americans. York, Sherry // Library Media Connection;Nov/Dec2004, Vol. 23 Issue 3, p30
Lists books by Native Americans that feature contemporary characters in fact and in fiction.
- Dialectic to Dialogic: Negotiating Bicultural Heritage in Sherman Alexie's Sonnets. Etter, Carrie // Telling the Stories: Essays on American Indian Literatures & Cul;2001, p143
The article focuses on the sonnets of Sherman Alexie. Alexie's sonnets in The Business of Fancydancing dealt with bicultural inheritances and identity. The sonnets also focused on the dialectic split between cultures and race, while at the same time placing the Native Indians experiences in a...


