Native American Literature.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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Many Native American writers of the 19th century wrote histories of their tribes.
One tribal historian was David Cusick (Tuscarora), whose Sketches of Ancient History of the Six Nations (1827) was the first published tribal history.
Tribal histories explained the deep ties that tribes had to their ancestral homelands.
Beginning in the 18th century, these ties took on special meaning because the United States government began removing Native Americans from their traditional lands.
These removalsforced Native Americans to uproot their families and travel hundreds of miles to unfamiliar lands.
Along with losing their possessions and their homelands, NativeAmericans suffered great casualties during these forced removals.
Among the worst removals was the Trail of Tears of 1838 and 1839, when thousands of Cherokeewere forced to journey from their homeland in the Southeast out to Indian Territory (now Oklahoma).
Of the 18,000 Cherokee who traveled the Trail of Tears, about4,000 died of starvation, exposure, disease, and despair.
One of the best-known early tribal historians was George Copway (Ojibwa), whose Traditional History and Characteristic Sketches of the Ojibway Nation (1850) emphasizes the importance of tribal oral history and explains the migrations, myths, religions, government, language, hunting, and games of his nation.
Other NativeAmericans who wrote about their cultures and nations include Peter Dooyentate Clarke (Wyandot), with his Origin and Traditional History of the Wyandotts, and Sketches of Other Indian Tribes of North America (1870); Chief Elias Johnson (Tuscarora), with his Legends, Traditions and Laws, of the Iroquois (1881); and Chief Andrew J.
Blackbird (Ottawa), with his History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan (1887).
The establishment of several Native American newspapers in the 19th century made an important contribution to Native American writing.
Among these newspaperswere the Cherokee Phoenix , first published in 1828, and the Cherokee Advocate , which began publication in 1844 after the Cherokee Nation was removed to Indian Territory.
Other notable newspapers included Copway’s American Indian , the White Earth Progress , the White Earth Tomahawk , and Wassaja .
Among the prominent 19th-century Native American writers of fiction were John Rollin Ridge (Cherokee), who wrote at mid-century, and Emily Pauline Johnson(Mohawk), whose career lasted into the early 20th century.
Ridge’s Life and Adventures of Joaquín Murieta (1854), the first novel published by a Native American, chronicles the adventures of a Mexican bandit during the California gold rush of 1849.
In his depiction of American racial injustice, Ridge not only describes the fate ofMexicans but also of his fellow Native Americans.
Johnson was a Canadian Mohawk who spent a great deal of her time touring Canada, England, and the United States as an advocate for Native American people.
Wellknown as a poet and as a performer of her poetry, she also wrote short stories for popular publications such as Mother’s Magazine and Boy’s World , which had large circulations.
Johnson’s books of poetry include The White Wampum (1895), Canadian Born (1903), and Flint and Feather (1912).
Her short stories are collected in Moccasin Maker (1913) and The Shagganappi (1913).
Sarah Winnemucca (Paiute) was also a prominent lecturer, writer, and Native American advocate.
Her Life Among the Paiutes, Their Wrongs and Claims (1883) was the first Native American autobiography written by a woman.
B 1900s and 2000s
Native American writers since 1900 have continued the traditions of their predecessors, but their styles and forms have evolved.
The novel has become a popular NativeAmerican literary genre, along with poetry, the short story, and autobiography.
At the same time, Native American scholars have begun investigating Native Americanhistory, sociology, ethnography, medicine, education, law, and literary criticism, among other fields.
In the past, Native American writers and scholars sought primarilyto educate non-Native American people about Native Americans, but today many Native Americans write for the benefit of Native American audiences.
Native American writing began to evolve new genres in part because of the influence of government-run boarding schools.
For generations, many Native Americanslearned English in mission schools (schools run by churches).
But, beginning in 1879 with the establishment of a school for Native Americans at the U.S.
Army’s Carlisle Barracks in Pennsylvania, many Native American children were forced to attend off-reservation schools.
While sometimes living hundreds of miles away from their homes, children attending the off-reservation schools were punished for speaking their native languages andwere told that their traditional ways of life were inferior to those of non-Native Americans.
The result was that many Native Americans were taught conventionalAmerican subjects, with special emphasis on reading and writing in traditional European literary genres.
They were later able to employ these skills in new andinnovative ways for their people’s own ends, but because they were also urged to view their own cultures as inferior, some of the students found themselves alienatedfrom their own people when they returned home.
Francis La Flesche of the Omaha wrote about his school experiences in The Middle Five, Indian Boys at School (1900).
B1 Stories and Novels
Native American literature of the 20th century was shaped by and helps shape political questions concerning Native American people.
One of the most prominent voicesof the early 20th century was Zitkala-Sa (Sioux), also known as Gertrude Simmons Bonnin.
Zitkala-Sa became a prominent voice for Native American rights.
Shepublished essays in the magazines The Atlantic Monthly and Harper’s , edited the American Indian Magazine in 1918 and 1919, and wrote two books, Old Indian Legends (1901) and American Indian Stories (1921).
Other political writers, such as Will Rogers (Cherokee) and Alexander Posey (Creek), used satire and humor to express their beliefs.
Charles Eastman (Sioux) continuedthis tradition of educating through storytelling with the publication of books such as Wigwam Evenings: Folktales Retold (1909).
In The Soul of the Indian (1911), Eastman explains the deeper ethical and moral underpinnings of some Lakota beliefs.
Two popular political writers of the first half of the 20th century were John Joseph Mathews (Osage) and D’Arcy McNickle (Cree and Salish).
Matthews’ Sundown (1934) and McNickle’s The Surrounded (1936) argue that cultural survival depends upon fighting the assimilation of Native Americans into mainstream American society. Matthews and McNickle published their novels during the 1930s, a decade that saw the U.S.
government loosen its assimilation policies regarding Native Americans.
Since the 1940s, anthologies have played an important role in Native American literature, primarily because they expose readers to different writers and styles.
The Winged Serpent (1946), edited by Margot Astrov (a non-Native American), was the first anthology of Native American literature to gain mainstream popularity.
The anthology form has been especially beneficial to Native American poetry.
Some noteworthy anthologies are Carriers of the Dream Wheel: Contemporary Native American Poetry (1975), Remembered Earth: An Anthology of Native American Literature (1979), and That’s What She Said: Contemporary Poetry and Fiction by Native American Women (1984).
In the 1950s and early 1960s, little Native American literature was produced.
One of the major reasons was that the political climate in North America was hostile totribal traditions, making it difficult to publish works dealing with Native American life.
But in the mid-1960s Native American writers began again to promote NativeAmerican culture.
A major reason for this resurgence was the Red Power movement.
While groups such as the Black Panthers and La Raza Unida fought for AfricanAmerican and Chicano rights, the Red Power movement energized Native Americans.
The Red Power movement emphasized developing pride in one’s self, sustainingtraditional Native American cultures and lands, and supporting Native American rights in the struggles of Native American communities with the government.
An important theme in Native American literature today is the issue of Native American identity—what it means to be Native American.
Winter in the Blood (1974) by James Welch (Blackfoot and Gros Ventre) is an important work that deals with one man’s developing understanding of who he is.
Welch’s main character comes tounderstand himself by piecing together his complex family history.
Like many other characters in contemporary Native American fiction, Welch’s hero suffers problemsthat have affected many Native American people, such as alcoholism and alienation..
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