Ethnic Positioning in Southwestern Mixed Heritage Writing explores the anxiety, frustrations and ignorance challenging the celebratory public discourse on mixed race and the way Southwestern writing facilitates the reformulations of identity as a self-conscious holder of cultural assets beyond the binaries of Indigenous and Euro-American ancestry.
Ethnic Positioning in Southwestern Mixed Heritage Writing explores the anxiety, frustrations and ignorance challenging the celebratory public discourse on mixed race and the way Southwestern writing facilitates the reformulations of identity as a self-conscious holder of cultural assets beyond the binaries of Indigenous and Euro-American ancestry.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Judit Kádár is Director of International Relations at the University of Physical Education, Budapest.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2 Multiracial Identity and the Southwest 2.1 "Core and Confluence": The Geo-Cultural Context of Mixedblood Writing 2.2 From "Halfbreed" to "Crossblood" 2.3 Southwestern Authors and Artists of Mixed Heritage: An Overview Chapter 3: Identity Negotiation in Southwestern Mixedblood Poetry: A Complementary Scope Chapter 4: "Blood Trails," Hidden Histories 4.1 The Beginning of Mixed Heritage Fictional Biographies: From Memoir to Postcolonial Storytelling 4.2 Laguna Pueblo Postcolonial Life-Writing and The Followers: Southwestern Mixed Heritage Autobiographies Chapter 5: Multiracial Identity and its Narrative Formulation 5.1 Four Decades of Mixed-Race Writing: Altering Visions in Selected Prose Texts 5.2 A Psychological Insight into Blended Heritage Identity Construction 5.3 Cultural Identity Formulation in Multiracial Narratives 5.4 Narrative Identity: From Object to Subject 5.5 Nanabush's "Pandora's Box of Possibilities": Humor in Contemporary Multiracial Writing Chapter 6: Some Interesting Cognitive Patterns 6.1 Grave Concerns and Nightwalkers 6.2 Sharpening Sights 6.3 "Restore me!" 6.4 "Indigenous Shapes of Water" in Mixedblood Writing Chapter 7: Conclusion Bibliography 8.1 Primary Sources 8.2 Secondary Sources
Preface Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2 Multiracial Identity and the Southwest 2.1 "Core and Confluence": The Geo-Cultural Context of Mixedblood Writing 2.2 From "Halfbreed" to "Crossblood" 2.3 Southwestern Authors and Artists of Mixed Heritage: An Overview Chapter 3: Identity Negotiation in Southwestern Mixedblood Poetry: A Complementary Scope Chapter 4: "Blood Trails," Hidden Histories 4.1 The Beginning of Mixed Heritage Fictional Biographies: From Memoir to Postcolonial Storytelling 4.2 Laguna Pueblo Postcolonial Life-Writing and The Followers: Southwestern Mixed Heritage Autobiographies Chapter 5: Multiracial Identity and its Narrative Formulation 5.1 Four Decades of Mixed-Race Writing: Altering Visions in Selected Prose Texts 5.2 A Psychological Insight into Blended Heritage Identity Construction 5.3 Cultural Identity Formulation in Multiracial Narratives 5.4 Narrative Identity: From Object to Subject 5.5 Nanabush's "Pandora's Box of Possibilities": Humor in Contemporary Multiracial Writing Chapter 6: Some Interesting Cognitive Patterns 6.1 Grave Concerns and Nightwalkers 6.2 Sharpening Sights 6.3 "Restore me!" 6.4 "Indigenous Shapes of Water" in Mixedblood Writing Chapter 7: Conclusion Bibliography 8.1 Primary Sources 8.2 Secondary Sources
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