Non-Fiction Books:

Engaged Resistance

Sorry, this product is not currently available to order

Here are some other products you might consider...

Engaged Resistance

American Indian Art, Literature, and Film from Alcatraz to the NMAI
Click to share your rating 0 ratings (0.0/5.0 average) Thanks for your vote!
Unavailable
Sorry, this product is not currently available to order

Description

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.

Author Biography

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.
Release date Australia
April 1st, 2011
Author
Audience
  • Professional & Vocational
Country of Publication
United States
Illustrations
109 color and b&w illus.
Imprint
University of Texas Press
Pages
297
Publisher
University of Texas Press
Dimensions
216x279x23
ISBN-13
9780292726963
Product ID
10406084

Customer reviews

Nobody has reviewed this product yet. You could be the first!

Write a Review

Marketplace listings

There are no Marketplace listings available for this product currently.
Already own it? Create a free listing and pay just 9% commission when it sells!

Sell Yours Here

Help & options

Filed under...