L364 2081 HUNTSMAN
Native American Literature
2:30p-3:45p TR (30) 3 CR.
English L364 will concern itself primarily with prose by contemporary
Native Americans, although we will start with the classic
collaborative (auto)biography Black Elk Speaks, which we will
treat as an example of traditional literature. This course will be
organized around several contrasts which we will try to address
throughout, including those between Native American literature and
other kinds of literature being created in America today, between
writing by men and writing by women, and between the ways literature
is regarded in the dominant Euro-American society and Native American
societies. Thus we will be looking as the structure of the various
literatures, their place in their respective cultures, and the
remarkable continuity of traditional values and concerns into
contemporary novels, most of which written by people who speak only
English and who are writing in a genre (extended prose fiction) that
was not found in any Native American culture before the period of
contact with Europeans.
While the precise contents of the course has yet to be fixed (most
texts will be in tradebook editions, notorious for going out of
print), we will surely consider the major writers in the field, such
as Louise Erdrich, Leslie Silko, N. Scott Momaday, James Welsh,
Michael Dorris, Paula Gunn Allen, Linda Hogan, and Gerald Vizenor.
The class will be divided into small groups, and each group will be
responsible for organizing the discussion of probably two books each,
a system which allows you some direct "hands-on" experience both with
textual criticism and the means of presenting a text to others. You
will write two or three papers, all of which you will be encouraged
to revise and resubmit. There should be two examinations, a midterm
and a final. I expect to complete the selection of texts by late
November and you can obtain a list of the books ordered from me
then.