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Native American and Chicano a Literature of the American Southwest: Intersections of Indigenous Literatures (Indigenous Peoples and Politics) PDF

164 Pages·2004·1.38 MB·English
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INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND POLITICS Edited by Franke Wilmer Montana State University A ROUTLEDGE SERIES INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND POLITICS FRANKE WILMER, General Editor INVENTING INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE Archaeology, Rural Development, and the Raised Field Rehabilitation Project in Bolivia Lynn Swartley THE GLOBALIZATION OF CONTENTIOUS POLITICS The Amazonian Indigenous Rights Movement Pamela L.Martin CULTURAL INTERMARRIAGE IN SOUTHERN APPALACHIA Cherokee Elements in Four Selected Novels by Lee Smith Katerina Prajnerova STORIED VOICES IN NATIVE AMERICAN TEXTS Harry Robinson, Thomas King, James Welch, and Leslie Marmon Silko Blanca Schorcht ON THE STREETS AND IN THE STATE HOUSE American Indian and Hispanic Women and Environmental Policymaking in New Mexico Diane-Michele Prindeville CHIEF JOSEPH, YELLOW WOLF, AND THE CREATION OF NEZ PERCE HISTORY IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST Robert R.McCoy NATIONAL IDENTITY AND THE CONFLICT AT OKA Native Belonging and Myths of Postcolonial Nationhood in Canada Amelia Kalant NATIVE AMERICAN AND CHICANO/A LITERATURE OF THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST Intersections of Indigenous Literature Christina M.Hebebrand ROUTLEDGE New York & London Published in 2004 by Routledge 29 West 35th Street New York, NY 10001 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group. This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk. Copyright © 2004 Routledge All right reserved. No part of this book may be printed or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now know or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or any other information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hebebrand, Christina M., 1969– Native American and Chicano/a literature of the American Southwest: intersections of indigenous literatures/Christina M.Hebebrand. p. cm.—(Indigenous peoples and politics) Includes bibliographical references (p.) and index. ISBN 0-415-94888-6 (hardback:alk. paper) 1. American literature-South western States-History and criticism. 2. American literature-Indian authors—History and criticism. 3. American literature-Mexican American authors—History and criticism. 4. Indians of North America—South western States-Intellectual life. 5. Mexican Americans-Southwestern States-Intellectual life. 6. Authors, American—Homes and haunts- Southwestern States. 7. Southwestern (States)-Intellectual life. 8. Southwestern (States)-In literature. 9. Mexican Americans in literature. 10. Indians in literature. I. Title. II. Series. PS277.H43 2004 810.9′979–dc22 2004000171 Hebebrand, Christina M. Native American and Chicano/a Literature of the American Southwest: Intersections of Indigenous Literatures. ISBN 0-203-33026-9 Master e-book ISBN ISBN: 0-415-94888-6 (hardback) Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS VII INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER ONE Imagined Past, Imagined Future: Recreating History to Write 7 the Future CHAPTER TWO Sacred Places, Holy Sites: The Connection of Religion and 29 Landscape CHAPTER Who’s the Other Now? Postcolonial Dialectics and Social 62 THREE Identity CHAPTER Weaving the Voices: Internarrative Identity 96 FOUR CONCLUSION 131 NOTES 134 BIBLIOGRAPHY 139 INDEX 145 Acknowledgments “3 AM.” From the book the last song by Joy Harjo. Copyright © 1975. Reprinted by permission of the author. “Remember.” From the book She Had Some Horses by Joy Harjo. Copyright © 1983, 1987 by Thunder’s Mouth Press. Appears by permission of the publisher, Thunder’s Mouth Press. “Transformations.” From the book In Mad Love and War by Joy Harjo. Copyright © 1990 by Wesleyan University Press. Appears by permission of the publisher, Wesleyan University Press. “Invasions.” By Jimmy Santiago Baca, from Black Mesa Poems, copyright © 1989 by Jimmy Santiago Baca. Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation. “Knowing the Snow Another Way.” By Jimmy Santiago Baca, from Black Mesa Poems, copyright © 1989 by Jimmy Santiago Baca. Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corporation. Introduction This study sets out to demonstrate that the shared history of Chicanos/as and Native Americans in the Southwest, their spiritual attachment to their homeland, and the diverse cultural, tribal, and familial influences on their lives, determine their literary characters, personas, and lyric voices and reflect their struggle to establish a unified bicultural identity. This identity allows them to persevere in the dominant Euro-American society as a unique cultural and social group. In mediating between the conflicting elements that impact their sense of self, indigenous authors of the Southwest can be fruitfully studied as a coherent group that sets itself apart from their colonizers. Some indigenous authors use the expression “the people” (sometimes spelled with a capital “p” or italicized) to designate their group; both Rudolfo Anaya (Chicano) in his novels Bless me, Ultima (1972), Heart of Aztlán (1976), and Alburquerque1 (1992), and Leslie Marmon Silko (Laguna Pueblo) in her novel Almanac of the Dead (1991) frequently make use of this expression to suggest a unity among tribal people of the Southwest. The name Chicanos/as gave themselves, “La Raza,” and the Navajo word by which tribal members call themselves, “Diné,” which means “the People” as well, can be seen as further examples of southwestern indigenous peoples’ belief in the cultural affinity with each other. In the 1977 collection of southwestern literary voices, entitled Southwest: A Contemporary Anthology, the editors Karl and Jane Kopp write, “The Southwest and its spirit are not defined by state lines, for geography, climate, and the human experience bound up with them elude such things” (393). This statement is reflected in the various attempts to define the Southwest geographically, i.e. in the diverging ways of broadly or narrowly delineating its demarcations. While the editors of Southwest follow the broader definition approach, including western Arkansas and Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico and southern Colorado, Arizona and southern Utah, as well as southern California, they do point to the fact that “The center of the Southwest is located in an area of Arizona and New Mexico that transcends the state boundaries, coincidental with an ancient kingdom or nation of the Anasazi” (xi). Moreover, the Southwest is a distinct region of the United States because “The original inhabitants of the Southwest, the Anasazi, and their descendants, plus other native peoples who journeyed to the New World long before Cortez or Columbus, have shaped a rich tradition of close involvement with ‘place’” (x). This sense of place, the feeling of attachment to the homeland, is reflected in the literary works of contemporary Native American and Chicano/a writers of the Southwest, and thus is one of several parallels that link these authors with each other. Janice Monk and Vera Norwood, in their article “Angles of Visions: Enhancing Our Perspectives on the Southwest” (1987), refer to this connection as well, stating that contemporary Native American and Chicano/a writers place emphasis on the connection between creative expression and the land, so that many of their “inspirations, materials, themes, and processes of creation emanate directly from the land,” and thus allow them to develop their unique literary voices (40).

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This book unfolds from the premise that Native American and Chicano authors of the Southwestern United States need to be considered and studied as a coherent cultural and social group in order to recognize the commonalities of their works as indigenous people of the region and to distinguish them fr
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