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«We Have a Commonalty and a Common Dream»

The Indigenous North American Novel in the 1990s

by Isabel Schneider (Author)
©1998 Thesis 260 Pages

Summary

Born out of the clash between oral traditions and Western literary standards, Native American fiction has grown into a unique and distinct art form. Aboriginal writers merge native and non-native elements and talk to a multicultural audience. Based on six novels published in 1993/94, the author illustrates the individual differences and the common ground existing among contemporary indigenous writers. Their fiction deals with concurrent themes, issues and characters, addressing questions of identity, belonging and 'Nativeness' in the modern world. Presenting heroes who move back and forth between the two cultures and create their own individual lifestyles, the novelsdeconstruct stereotypes and define Native American identity in new ways which reflect the reality of modern indigenous life in North America.

Details

Pages
260
Year
1998
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631331477
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1998. 260 pp.

Biographical notes

Isabel Schneider (Author)

The Author: Isabel Schneider was born in Karlsruhe in 1967. She studied English, French and Business Administration at Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen and at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee. After working in two indigenous communities in Canada's Northwest Territories for a year, she returned to Giessen to write her dissertation.

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Title: «We Have a Commonalty and a Common Dream»