From Sherman Alexie's films to the poetry and fiction of Louise Erdrich and Leslie Marmon Silko to the paintings of Jaune Quick-To-See Smith and the sculpture of Edgar Heap of Birds, Native American movies, literature, and art have become increasingly influential, garnering critical praise and enjoying mainstream popularity. Recognizing that the time has come for a critical assessment of this exceptional artistic output and its significance to American Indian and American issues, Dean Rader offers the first interdisciplinary examination of how American Indian artists, filmmakers, and writers tell their own stories. Beginning with rarely seen photographs, documents, and paintings from the Alcatraz Occupation in 1969 and closing with an innovative reading of the National Museum of the American Indian, Rader initiates a conversation about how Native Americans have turned to artistic expression as a means of articulating cultural sovereignty, autonomy, and survival. Focusing on figures such as author/director Sherman Alexie (Flight, Face, and Smoke Signals), artist Jaune Quick-To-See Smith, director Chris Eyre (Skins), author Louise Erdrich (Jacklight, The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse), sculptor Edgar Heap of Birds, novelist Leslie Marmon Silko, sculptor Allen Houser, filmmaker and actress Valerie Red Horse, and other writers including Joy Harjo, LeAnne Howe, and David Treuer, Rader shows how these artists use aesthetic expression as a means of both engagement with and resistance to the dominant U.S. culture. Raising a constellation of new questions about Native cultural production, Rader greatly increases our understanding of what aesthetic modes of resistance can accomplish that legal or political actions cannot, as well as why Native peoples are turning to creative forms of resistance to assert deeply held ethical values.
Les mer
Profusely illustrated with more than one hundred images, this is the first book that focuses on how Native Americans have used artistic expression to both engage with and resist Anglo culture while asserting deeply held ethical values.
Les mer
Acknowledgments Prologue Chapter 1. Engaged Resistance: Alcatraz Chapter 2. The Cartography of Sovereignty: Jaune Quick-to-See Smith's Map Paintings Chapter 3. The New American Indian Novel: A User's Map Chapter 4. The Cinematics of Engagement, the Politics of Resistance: Naturally Native and Skins Chapter 5. Word as Weapon: Visual Culture and Contemporary American Indian Poetry Chapter 6. Compositional Resistance: Genre and Contemporary American Indian Poetry Chapter 7. Celluloid Alexie: Postindianism in Smoke Signals and The Business of Fancydancing Chapter 8. Narrative Resistance: Leslie Marmon Silko's "Storyteller" Chapter 9. Roofs, Roads, and Rotundas: American Indian Public Art Chapter 10. Engaged Resistance: The National Museum of the American Indian Epilogue Notes Works Cited Index
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""[Rader's] insightful readings of Native texts and symbols are sensitive and accomplished. . . . Engaged Resistance performs important cultural work by bringing new attention to Native American artists, authors, and filmmakers, whose contributions remain marginalized and under appreciated in popular culture."" * Western American Literature *
Les mer
Profusely illustrated with more than one hundred images, this is the first book that focuses on how Native Americans have used artistic expression to both engage with and resist Anglo culture while asserting deeply held ethical values.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780292726963
Publisert
2011
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Texas Press
Vekt
1219 gr
Høyde
279 mm
Bredde
216 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
06, P
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
297

Forfatter

Biographical note

DEAN RADER is Professor of English at the University of San Francisco. He is the coauthor (with Jonathan Silverman) of The World is a Text: Writing, Reading, and Thinking about Visual Culture and (with Janice Gould) Speak to Me Words: Essays on Contemporary American Indian Poetry. His book of poems, Works & Days, won the 2010 T. S. Eliot Poetry Prize.