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Indigenous Language Revitalization: Success, Sustainability, and the Future of Human Culture
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In: Capstone Showcase (2022)
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The case of the Indian detective: Native American mystery novels
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Abstract:
Though antecedents stretch back at least to Judson R. Taylor’s Phil Scott, the Indian Detective: A Tale of Startling Mysteries (1882), the Indian detective did not captivate the public imagination until the Western lost force as a vehicle for telling stories about Indians. Tony Hillerman and his 1970s competitors created Mysteries that carry over much of the Western’s DNA but put the sheriff’s badge on an Indian, wresting the Indian as anti-establishment symbol from the 1960s counterculture and enlisting him in service of Law and Order. With its imperative that a tantalizing puzzle resolve into a rational solution, the Mystery genre is well-suited for continuing the centuries-old project of making the Indian legible to non-Indians because it can satisfy the dual impulses of the “Dialectic of Diversity,” exoticism and assimilation. Non-Indian readers want Indians to be both different (strange, mystical, more in tune with nature, etc.) and the same (sharing recognizable desires, worldviews, motivations, etc.). The genre that teases with the unknown and even the supernatural, but also most celebrates rationality, justice, and perhaps individual agency, has become the preferred venue in which most Americans encounter fictional Indians. Hillerman’s success has helped produce a subgenre’s worth of imitators. Most of these Native sleuths have been invented by non-Native writers, who tend to follow the dictates of the genre closely. Their protagonists may grumble about police bureaucracy, but they apprehend criminals without seriously challenging American jurisprudence and settler state ideological frameworks. The relatively few Indians who have written Mysteries with indigenous protagonists, by contrast, have tended to resist, adapt, and transform the genre, and their novels less often ratify “official” law enforcement. Apparently, they find that conventional Mysteries, with their emphasis on individualism and their reassurance that justice will prevail, do not allow Native American writers to tell the kinds of stories they want about Indians. ; Limited ; Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD system
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Keyword:
Mystery Genre; Native American Literature; Popular Culture; Representations of Indians
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/108205
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Oral History Interview with Nabintou Doumbia on December 20, 2020
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In: Dream Storytelling Interviews (2020)
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Enacting Indigenous Language and Cultural Reclamation across Geographies and Positionalities
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The Effects of Cultural Knowledge and Exposure on Speech and Language Assessments
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Languages, Cultures, Media
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In: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01412764 ; France. Langages (18), Université Savoie Mont-Blanc, pp.361, 2016, 978-2-919732-75-3 (2016)
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Utilizing Culturally Congruent Educational Interventions to Improve Native American Diabetic Outcomes
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In: Doctoral Projects (2016)
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Revisiting the Diego Blood Group System in Amerindians: Evidence for Gene-Culture Comigration
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In: ISSN: 1932-6203 ; EISSN: 1932-6203 ; PLoS ONE ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01820037 ; PLoS ONE, Public Library of Science, 2015, 10 (7), pp.e0132211. ⟨10.1371/journal.pone.0132211⟩ (2015)
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Authorized Agents: The Projects of Native American Writing in the Era of Removal.
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Student interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in Nursing, clip 12 of 13
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Differences in the Extent of Use of Culture in the Classroom Between Indigenous and Non-indigenous Teachers and the Relationship to Student Reported Academic Achievement in Reading and Math
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In: Theses and Dissertations (2014)
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Native Americans on Film: Conversations, Teaching, and Theory
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In: American Popular Culture (2013)
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Constructing Native American Identity within the Context of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act
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In: Modzelewski, Darren. (2012). Constructing Native American Identity within the Context of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act. UC Berkeley: Anthropology. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/3z35w3ts (2012)
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Wántwint Inmí Tiináwit: A Reflection of What I Have Learned
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17 |
The Influence of Culture and Arts on the Development of Peruvian Children
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In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1271384749 (2010)
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PRESERVATION ETHICS IN THE CASE OF NEBRASKA’S NATIONALLY REGISTERED HISTORIC PROPERTIES
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In: Theses and Dissertations in Geography (2010)
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The Dualities of Endurance: A Collaborative Historical Archaeology of Ethnogenesis at Brothertown, 1780-1910
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In: Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations (2010)
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Graduate Committee Minutes
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In: Graduate Committee Minutes (2009)
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