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         Native American Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Contemporary Native American Literature (British Association for American Studies (BAAS) Paperbacks) by Rebecca Tillett, 2007-12-04
  2. Roots and Branches: A Resource of Native American Literature-Themes, Lessons, and Bibliographies by Dorothea M. Susag, 1998-11
  3. Handbook of Native American literature.: An article from: Wind Speaker
  4. Read and Respond: Native American Literature by Karen Brown, Holly Engel, 1994-06
  5. American Lazarus: Religion and the Rise of African-American and Native American Literatures.(Book Review): An article from: Christianity and Literature by Walter A. Hesford, 2004-03-22
  6. Glencoe Native American Literature by McGraw-Hill, Glencoe McGraw-Hill, 2001-01-17
  7. Recovering the Word: Essays on Native American Literature by Brian Swann, Arnold Krupat, 1987-12
  8. Native American Literature
  9. Songs from an Outcast (Native American literature series) (Native American literature series) by John E. Smelcer, Denise Levertov, 2000-07-24
  10. Native American Literature (Twayne's United States Authors Series) by Andrew Wiget, 1985-03
  11. Inventing the American Primitive Politics, Gender & the Reception of Native American Literature, 1790-1936 (American Literature) by Helen Carr, 1996-03
  12. On the Translation of Native American Literatures. (book reviews): An article from: MELUS by Nora Barry, 1994-06-22
  13. Comeuppance at Kicking Horse Casino and Other Stories (Native American Literature 10) (Native American series) (Native American series) by Charles Brashear, 2000-04-25
  14. The Remembered earth: An anthology of contemporary Native American literature

21. Native American Literature Research Guide
To locate native american literature resources at the University of Arizona To find articles about native american literature, including literary
http://www.library.arizona.edu/library/teams/fah/subpathpages/natamlit/natres.ht
    The following resources are intended to help you get started in conducting research in Native American Literature and in locating materials by Native American authors:
    Indexes to Articles
    Bibliographies Reference Assistance B ooks and Other Materials:
    To locate Native American Literature resources at the University of Arizona Libraries, do a SUBJECT search in the SABIO Catalog American Fiction -
    Indian Authors Indian Women - North America - Literary Collections American Literature -
    Indian Authors Indians of North America - Folklore Folk Literature, Indian Indians of North America - Poetry (Note: the following subject headings may also include resources about the literature of India): Indian Authors Indian Literature Indian Poetry
    There are also subject headings for individual Nations; for example:

22. Native American Literature
native american literature. Agua Dulce by Mary Austin; American Indian Stories by Gertrude Simmons Bonnin; Angel DeCora An Autobiography
http://www.edchange.org/multicultural/sites/nat-amlit.html
Home Book Store Social Justice Store Tell a Friend Choose a Section: Home Teacher's Corner EdChange Research Room FREE Handouts Awareness Quizzes Curriculum Reform Social Justice News Teacher Action Research Awareness Activities Voices! Poetry E-Journal Multicultural Song Index Quips and Quotations Other Sites Join the Listserv Film Reviews Social Justice Store Search: Native American Literature Related Resources Back to Multicultural Paths Visit EdChange Social Justice Store for wares and wears with progressive messages: shirts, hats, posters, and more!

23. Native American Literature
Read some of the great resources that are available in Native American literary study. Read the stories, get a taste for the curriculum and enjoy.
http://classiclit.about.com/od/nativeamlit/
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Native American Literature
Read some of the great resources that are available in Native American literary study. Read the stories, get a taste for the curriculum and enjoy.
Alphabetical
Recent Up a category Books About Native American Literature These books collect the poems, short stories, essays, and memoirs from more than 200 years of Native American writing. Also find bibliographies and other critical resources. Eastern Woodland Indians: Northeastern Indians Bibliography "The Northern Maize (Corn) Area extended from southern New England and Maryland to the Lower Missouri River. These peoples practiced agriculture and were hunters and fishermen. Some tribes included the Iroquois [Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca Indians]; the Huron, the Lenni-Lenape [Delaware]. The Penobscots lived in the far northeastern corner of the United States [Maine, Vermont, etc.]." Native American Literature - USC Sources for scholars of American Indian oral and written literature.

24. Books About Native American Literature
These books collect the poems, short stories, essays, and memoirs from more than 200 years of Native American writing. Also find bibliographies and other
http://classiclit.about.com/cs/toppicks/tp/aatp-nalit.htm
var zLb=5; zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Literature: Classic A-to-Z Characters ... Abel Books About Native American Literature Homework Help Literature: Classic Essentials Book Reviews ... Help w(' ');zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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Search Literature: Classic Stay up to date! Native American Literature: An Anthology Nothing But the Truth : An Anthology of Native American Literature Email to a friend Print this page
Suggested Reading American Literature American Writers Captivity Narratives Native American Literature Related Guide Picks Adventures of Huckleberry Finn American Sea Writing Autobiography of Mark Twain Jack London's Golden State ... Mark Twain: Gilded Age and Other Novels Most Popular The Catcher in the Rye Quiz Mark Twain Quiz 1984 Quiz Banned Classics ... The Red Badge of Courage Quiz What's Hot The Red Badge of Courage Quiz How to Improve Literacy The Prioress's Tale, Modern - Canterbury Tales - Geoffrey Ch...

25. Native American Literature
native american literature. American Indian Literary Text Resources Provides native american literature Web Resources - Guide to web-based Native
http://www.ability.org.uk/native_american_literature.html
Our Aims Services Stats ... Z Native American Literature American Indian Literary Text Resources - Provides links to dozens of contemporary Native American works available online. The American Native Press Archives - Online database for University of Arkansas's repository of Native American works; includes extensive searchable bibliography. Electronic Text Center: Native Americans - Largest collection of 19th- and 20th-century Native American literature available online; also includes literary pieces about Native Americans. Looking Back - The Lenni-Lenape and The Red Record - Given to a white missionary in 1820, the Wallum Olum or Red Record is believed to be one of the world's oldest surviving histories. Using pictographs and later progressing to word forms, it chronicles the history of the Lenni-Lenape original people from a creation account (B.C.) to the early 1800s. Native American Authors - Provides information on Native North American authors with bibliographies of their published works, biographical information, and links to online resources including interviews, online texts and tribal web sites. Native American Literature Web Resources - Guide to web-based Native American Literature resources.

26. American Indian Literature Resources
Teaching native american literature. Glossary of Literary Terms As applied to American literature; Teaching N. Scott Momaday Kenneth M. Roemer in The Heath
http://cobalt.lang.osaka-u.ac.jp/~krkvls/literature.html
Bookshop Browsers and Publishers
Publications by Native American Authors (1999-2000)
General
    On-line Anthologies and Syllabi
    • Early American Literature (to 1776) Source: United States Information Agency USIA's Outline in American Literature includes Silko and Momaday in it's "New Directions" section: "Set in the striking landscape of her native New Mexico, Native American novelist Leslie Marmon Silko's critically esteemed novel Ceremony (1977) has gained a large general audience. Like N. Scott Momaday's poetic The Way to Rainy Mountain (1969), it is a "chant novel" structured on Native American healing rituals. Silko's novel The Almanac of the Dead (1991) offers a panorama of the Southwest, from ancient tribal migrations to present-day drug runners and corrupt real estate developers reaping profits by misusing the land."

27. The Red Road:a Pathway Into Native American Literature
A pathway into native american literature including native authored poems, essays, and student papers.
http://home.earthlink.net/~jandsgordon/
This site is optimized for a resolution of 1024 x 768 Essays Hooking Eels Historical Fishing More to Come Poetry It was a Special Treat the belly of the land Hunter's Morning Dogwood Blossoms ... Defending Walt Whitman More to Come Links Literary and Cultural Welcome to The Red Road. This site is designed to be an introduction into Native American authored literature. There are many intricacies embedded in the works of native authors, and most of these works emphasize the importance of Native American culture, community, identity, and a personal relationship with a particular landscape. These relationships ensure personal survival, survival of Native American people as a whole, and the survival of the earth. This recurring value in Native American authored literature is very important because it presents to the reader the idea that the life of the land and human life at their best are inseparable. Historical events (not too distant) have directly influenced Native American society as a whole, and these influences have shaped native writers' works, particularly in post-1968 native literature. A brief synopsis of some of these influences follows: Nearly 400 years after Columbus opened the New World to European settlement, the military conquest of Native Americans was completed when Custer's old command, the seventh Calvary division, massacred Big Foot's surrendering band of Lakotahs at Wounded Knee. That slaughter forever ended Native American armed resistance in the United States and all surviving "hostiles" were located upon their respective reservations. Most observers predicted that Native Americans would soon vanish from the face of the earth, or completely assimilate into the white population of the United States.

28. Wiget Essay: Teaching The American Literatures
In addressing the issue of teaching native american literature, The most substantial research guide for native american literatures is Ruoff (1990).
http://www.georgetown.edu/tamlit/essays/native_am.html
Essays on Teaching the American Literatures
(from the Heath Anthology Newsletter
A Talk Concerning First Beginnings:
Teaching Native American Oral Literature
by Andrew Wiget
New Mexico State University

In addressing the issue of teaching Native American literature, I want to focus my attention on a single text, one that most teachers and students find very difficult: the Zuni Talk Concerning the First Beginning. [1, 26-40] This is a key text for a number of reasons: as a mythological text, it opens the entire question of worldview; as a transcription of an oral text, it raises all the aesthetic questions associated with oral performance and transcription; and as a foundational text, it establishes a framework for a subsequent exploration of another Zuni text, Sayatasha's Night Chant, [1, 2644-63] and for useful comparisons with foundational European texts of encounter. I would also like to call the reader's attention to a stimulating article by Jeanne Holland in a recent issue of the CEA Critic and respond to some of the issues she confronted in her attempts at teaching Native American literature from the Heath Anthology.

29. Native American Oral Literatures
Wiget s native american literature and Ruoff s American Indian Many forms of native american literature also employ different kinds of artistic devices
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/nativetr.html
Native American Oral Literatures
Contributing Editor: Andrew Wiget
Classroom Issues
Teachers face a number of difficulties in bringing before their students something as unfamiliar as Native American oral literatures. The problems will vary, of course, from situation to situation. Jeanne Holland's article in the Bibliography on page 13 outlines some of the difficulties she faced in using the first edition of this anthology, some of which we have tried to remedy in this second edition, others of which I addressed in a recent issue of The Heath Anthology of American Literature Newsletter (see Bibliography). Native American Literature and Ruoff's American Indian Literatures constitute a very valuable core of essential reference works. Instructors should also consult the Smithsonian's new, multivolume Handbook of North American Indians , for its many articles on the history and culture of specific tribes and its extensive bibliographies, and Murray (1990) for a thorough discussion of how the dynamics of the translation/transcription situation shape the text we read. culture . Culture is a system of beliefs and values through which a group of people structure their experience of the world. By working with this definition of culture, which is very close to the way current criticism understands the impact of ideology upon literature, we can begin to pluralize our notion of the world and understand that other peoples can organize their experience in different ways, and dramatize their experience of the world through different symbolic forms. If time is available, I would highly recommend that the class view "Winds of Change," a PBS documentary that dramatizes the adaptability of contemporary Indian cultures, and goes a long way toward restoring the visible presence of Indian diversity.

30. Native American Children's Literature In The Classroom: An Annotated Bibliograph
native american literature for children and young adults. Library Trends, 41(3), 414436. In this survey article Hirschfelder provides both an excellent
http://library.humboldt.edu/~berman/naclit.htm
NATIVE AMERICAN CHILDREN'S LITERATURE IN THE CLASSROOM
AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Joan Berman
October 1998; June 1999; February 2002; January 2004 In my dual roles as Native American Studies Librarian and children's literature specialist at the Humboldt State University Library I am often asked to recommend "good" Native American children's books. I have prepared this bibliography as an introduction to a complex topic. I invite the reader to explore the selections, bearing in mind that although I have attempted to include the major works on the subject, I have also noted items of specific interest to the local, California community. This was initially prepared as an example of an annotated bibliography for my class, Professional Studies 180: Library Sources in Education, Fall 1998. Multicultural Review , 1(2), 26-33. The authors were president and secretary of the American Indian Library Association at the time this article was written; it is an adaptation of a program presented at the American Library Association Annual Conference in 1991. The selective annotated bibliography is in four parts: recommended titles, titles to avoid, guides to selecting books and sources of current reviews, and sources for books on Indians. This is an excellent, accessible introduction to the subject. Charles, J. (1996). Out of the cupboard and into the classroom: children and the American Indian literary experience.

31. Encyclopedia Smithsonian: Native American Literature
Recovering the Word Essays on native american literature. 1987 Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California. Prepared by the Resource Center,
http://www.si.edu/resource/faq/nmai/nalit.htm
Smithsonian Institution
Native American Literature
R ecommended Books on Native American Literature: Anthologies Erdoes, Richard and Alfonso Ortiz, editors. American Indian Myths and Legends . 1984 New York: Pantheon Marriott, Alice and Carol Rachin. American Indian Mythology . 1968 New York: Crowell. Swann, Brian, editor. Coming to Light: Contemporary Translations of the Native Literatures of North America . 1994 New York: Random House. Thompson, Stith. Tales of the North American Indians . 1980 Bloomington: Indiana University. Literary Criticism Kroeber, Karl, et al., Traditional American Indian Literatures . 1981 Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. Radin, Paul. The Trickster . 1956, 1972 New York: Schoken Books. Swan, Brian, and Arnold Krupat, editors. Recovering the Word: Essays on Native American Literature . 1987 Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California. Prepared by the Resource Center, National Museum of the American Indian,
in cooperation with the Public Inquiry Mail and Telephone Information Services, NOTE: This publication can be made available in Braille or audio cassette. To obtain a copy in one of these formats, please call or write:

32. Native American Literature (CULF 1318)
Welcome to my CULF 1318 native american literature web page. Learning about the art and literature of Native American tribal cultures requires the
http://www.stedwards.edu/hum/rainwater/CF18NALit.html
NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE
Cultural Foundations 1318
Professor Catherine Rainwater
Hello. Welcome to my CULF 1318: Native American Literature web page. Here you may find out more about the course so that you can decide whether or not you'd like to enroll. Or maybe you're just curious and you're only browsing. That's fine. You'll learn just a little about the history of Native American writing in the United States; you'll find out what the fall 2003 class will be reading and thinking about; and then you'll find out more about me and how I came to teach this course here at St. Edward's University. "Just removing obscuring projections from other persons, let alone the world, is demanding psychological work. Yet any increase in understanding of another person, any appreciation of their true nature, requires the removal of our projections upon them. . . . Removal of projections upon family, friends, and neighbors yields a corresponding increase in self-knowledgesomething never bought cheaply or easily. In a similar way, any hard won increase in knowledge of the outer world demands a removal of our projections on the world and correspondingly liberates us and increases our self-knowledge."Victor Mansfield in Synchronicity, Science, and Soul-Making.

33. U.S. Society And Values, "Contemporary U.S. Literature: Multicultural Perspectiv
For native american literature did not merely spring up. As the 20th century progressed, native american literature broadened beyond memoir and
http://usinfo.state.gov/journals/itsv/0200/ijse/geary.htm
NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE: REMEMBRANCE, RENEWAL
By Geary Hobson
In 1969, the fiction committee for the prestigious Pulitzer Prizes in literature awarded its annual honor to N. Scott Momaday, a young professor of English at Stanford University in California, for a book entitled House Made of Dawn The fact that Momaday's novel dealt almost entirely with Native Americans did not escape the attention of the news media or of readers and scholars of contemporary literature. Neither did the author's Kiowa Indian background. As news articles pointed out, not since Oliver LaFarge received the same honor for Laughing Boy, exactly 40 years earlier, had a so-called "Indian" novel been so honored. But whereas LaFarge was a white man writing about Indians, Momaday was an Indian the first Native American Pulitzer laureate. That same year, 1969, another young writer, a Sioux attorney named Vine Deloria, Jr., published Custer Died For Your Sins, subtitled "an Indian Manifesto." It examined, incisively, U.S. attitudes at the time towards Native American matters, and appeared almost simultaneously with The American Indian Speaks

34. US Dept Of State - Publications
Index of Native American Book Resources Includes extensive links to and presses specializing in native american literature, as well as links to books
http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/oal/amlitweb.htm
Advanced Search/Archive Saturday September 24, 2005 USINFO Publications
Key Sites on American Literature
American Literature - General
Colonial and 19th Century American Literature and Poetry

Modern and Contemporary American Literature and Poetry

    AMERICAN LITERATURE - GENERAL
    African American Literature
    Maintained at the University of Southern California, provides links to resources on African-American literature, literary criticism, articles, dissertations, and general reference materials, as well as links to specific genres of literature poetry, drama, novels, and short fiction.
    African American Literature and History
    Includes a brief history of African-American literature, online e-texts from the New York Public Library's Schomburg Center, full text poetry for several African-American poets, and online resource documents on literature by and about blacks.
    African American Writers: Online E-texts
    Includes biographical information on as well as the writings of a host of African-American writers, ranging over time from Jupiter Hammon in the 1700s to contemporary writers.
    American Authors on the Web
    A very comprehensive site from Nagoya University that presents a chronological listing of almost 800 American authors and includes biographical authors and/or writing samples for the majority of them.

35. Native American Literatures Syllabus
Syllabus for Anthropology 333 native american literatures How is native american literature defined, and what part should American Indian languages and
http://oncampus.richmond.edu/faculty/ASAIL/syll/en.html
Eleanor Nevins
E-mail: mec6u@virginia.edu
Syllabus for Anthropology 333: Native American Literatures
Summer session I
Cabell 319, MTWThF 1:00-3:15
How is Native American Literature defined, and what part should American Indian languages and live verbal performances have to play in this definition? Are our own cultural assumptions that accompany the distinction between contemporary literature and oral tradition warranted, or do these need to be rethought? These are some of the questions addressed in this class. We will read novellas, short stories and poetries. Our reading will be interwoven with experiences of films, poetry-slams, audio-recordings, and Web publications. We will compare the written work of contemporary Native American authors with examples of oral performances by persons living in Native American communities, including performances recorded by local artists, educators, anthropologists, linguists and folklorists. Classes will be divided into short lectures, audio/video experiences, participatory readings, and discussion. Students will write three 3-page essays addressed to the readings and complete a short ethnopoetic analysis of a Native American language oral narrative of their choosing from a list of available online resources. Student grades will be based upon:
  • three 3-page essays 20% each ethnopoetic analysis 20% student participation/reading response 20%

Required ReadingAvailable at the University Bookstore:
Rodney Frey

36. Native American Literature - BookSpot.com Feature
Thirtyfive years ago, Native Americans had little voice in literature. native american literature Web Resources Maintained by the University of Arizona
http://www.bookspot.com/features/nativeamerican.htm

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Thirty-five years ago, Native Americans had little voice in literature. Folktales and legends, which entered American culture through movies, television and books written by outsiders, attempted to tell the stories of American Indians living on reservations, farms and in cities.
It was not until 1968, when N. Scott Momaday published his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, "House Made of Dawn," that people read the primary text of a Native American. During the 1970s, more works by Momaday appeared, along with other novels, poetry and short stories. Narrating their own lives, religions and cultures, Native Americans built a genre that now fills bookstores and is taught in classrooms from kindergarten through graduate school.
Like other historically oppressed groups, Native Americans incorporated influences, traditions and personal experiences into their work. Link to the following sites for a well-rounded overview of Native American literature:

37. American And English Literature Internet Resources
Here you can find links to native american literature, newsletters and journals, organizations, bibliographies and historic materials.
http://library.scsu.ctstateu.edu/litbib.html
American and English Language Internet Resources Contents

38. Native American Literature
Native American Folktales and Literature Listed in the index are the following Native American tales How the Bear Lost his Tail, The Girl who Married a
http://www.shuntington.k12.ny.us/nativeamerlit.htm
Native American Folktales
and
Literature Writing Activitie s Stories Around the Campfire: Native American Myths, Legends and Stories
http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/5292/stories.htm

This wonderful anthology of stories should be heard, read and enjoyed by people of all ages. “The Elder Speaks: Come, sit here by the fire. The night has begun, and your work for today is done. Warm yourself and listen to my stories. In Beauty it is done.,,, for this I am happy. Let your mind do the walking, so that your feet may rest.” Stories, Fables, and Legends
http://www.indians.org/welker/stories.htm

Use this site as a resource for your students to practice their storyteller skills. Challenge your students to learn a story, and orally share it with the class during a "Story Telling Pow-Wow." AADIZOOKAANAG – Traditional Stories, Legends and Myths
http://www.kstrom.net/isk/stories/myths.html

Aadizookaan means (in Anishinaabemowin, or Ojibwe language) "a traditional story" similar to a myth or legend. This Web site offers myths told by various tribes from different regions. Star Lore or Native America
http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~skywise/legends.html

39. PAL:Native American Oral Literatures
Chapter 1 Early American Literature to 1700 Native American Oral Literatures Teaching native american literature from The Heath Anthology of
http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap1/native.html
PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide - An Ongoing Project Paul P. Reuben Chapter 1: Early American Literature to 1700 - Native American Oral Literatures Native American Authors Tsalagi (Cherokee) Literature Selected Bibliography MLA Style Citation of this Web Page ... Home Page Learning and Teaching Strategies in dealing with Native American Oral Literatures Andrew Wiget is a distinguished scholar in this field - note the bibliographical entries below. Here are some of his comments: Culture is a system of beliefs and values through which a group of people structure their experience of the world. By working with this definition of culture, which is very close to the way current criticism understands the impact of ideology upon literature, we can begin to pluralize our notion of the world and understand that other peoples can organize their experience in different ways, and dramatize their experience of the world through different symbolic forms. If culture is a system of beliefs and values by which people organize their experience of the world, then it follows that forms of expressive culture such as these (creation) myths should embody the basic beliefs and values of the people who create them. These beliefs and values can be roughly organized in three areas: (1) beliefs about the nature of the physical world; (2) beliefs about social order and appropriate behavior; and (3) beliefs about human nature and the problem of good and evil.

40. The Infography About Native American Literature
Sources recommended by a professor whose research specialty is native american literature.
http://www.infography.com/content/918802719059.html
Search The Infography:
Native American Literature
The following sources are recommended by a professor whose research specialty is Native American literature.
Six Superlative Sources
Allen, Paula Gunn. The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the Feminine in American Indian Traditions. Beacon Press, 1986. Owens, Louis. Other Destinies: Understanding the American Indian Novel. University of Oklahoma Press, 1992. Porter, Joy, and Kenneth M. Roemer, eds. The Cambridge Companion to Native American Literature. Cambridge University Press, 2005. Roemer, Kenneth, ed. Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 175: Native American Writers of the United States. Gale Research, 1997. Strom, Karen M. Storytellers: Native American Authors Online . http://www.hanksville.org/storytellers/ Wilson, Norma C. The Nature of Native American Poetry. University of New Mexico Press, 2001.
Other Excellent Sources
Densmore, Frances. Music of the Acoma, Isleta, Cochiti and Zuni Pueblos. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology, 1957; reprint, Decapo Press, 1972. Ruoff, Lavonne. American Indian Literatures: An Introduction, Bibliographic Review and Selected Bibliography. Modern Language Association, 1990.

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