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The Queerness of Native American Literature (Indigenous Americas) (Hardcover)

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Description


With a new and more inclusive perspective for the growing field of queer Native studies, Lisa Tatonetti provides a genealogy of queer Native writing after Stonewall. Looking across a broad range of literature, Tatonetti offers the first overview and guide to queer Native literature from its rise in the 1970s to the present day.

In The Queerness of Native American Literature, Tatonetti recovers ties between two simultaneous renaissances of the late twentieth century: queer literature and Native American literature. She foregrounds how Indigeneity intervenes within and against dominant interpretations of queer genders and sexualities, recovering unfamiliar texts from the 1970s while presenting fresh, cogent readings of well-known works. In juxtaposing the work of Native authors—including the longtime writer–activist Paula Gunn Allen, the first contemporary queer Native writer Maurice Kenny, the poet Janice Gould, the novelist Louise Erdrich, and the filmmakers Sherman Alexie, Thomas Bezucha, and Jorge Manuel Manzano—with the work of queer studies scholars, Tatonetti proposes resourceful interventions in foundational concepts in queer studies while also charting new directions for queer Native studies.

Throughout, she argues that queerness has been central to Native American literature for decades, showing how queer Native literature and Two-Spirit critiques challenge understandings of both Indigeneity and sexuality.

About the Author


Lisa Tatonetti is associate professor of English at Kansas State University. She is coeditor of Sovereign Erotics: A Collection of Two-Spirit Literature.

Praise For…


"A productive, early step in an effort to enrich and complicate the ways in which to reimagine Native American literature and study."—CHOICE

"The Queerness of Native American Literature is a necessary book for historians of sexuality, indigeneity, and late twentieth-century literature, and it provides a valuable window onto complex historical intersectionalities."—Journal of American History

"Tatonetti’s project is one that encourages us to challenge the boundaries of our disciplines and to ask about what texts we are not reading, or what readings we are not seeing in texts. A most welcome contribution that will undoubtedly inspire a range of discussions in the years to come."—The Canadian Journal of Native Studies


Product Details
ISBN: 9780816692781
ISBN-10: 0816692785
Publisher: Univ Of Minnesota Press
Publication Date: November 30th, 2014
Pages: 296
Language: English
Series: Indigenous Americas