Quotations & Speeches, Native Americans - Biography, Medical Figures, Native North American People
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Overview
"This book is an exploration of the surprising impact of American legal systems from the Revolutionary War until the 1920s on Indian autobiographers' approaches to writing about their own lives. Historically, Native American autobiographers have written in the shadow of "Indian law," a nuanced form of natural law discourse with its own set of related institutions and forms (the reservation, the treaty etc.). In Sovereign Selves, David J. Carlson develops a rigorously historicized argument about the relationship between the specific colonial model of "Indian" identity that was developed and disseminated through U.S. legal institutions, and the acts of autobiographical self-definition by the "colonized" Indians expected to fit that model." Carlson argues that by drawing on the conventions of early colonial treaty making, nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Indian autobiographers sought to adapt and redefine the terms of Indian law as a way to assert specific property-based and civil rights. Focusing primarily on the autobiographical careers of two major writers (William Apess and Charles Eastman), Sovereign Selves traces the way that their sustained engagement with colonial legal institutions gradually enabled them to produce a new rhetoric of "Indianness".Book Details
Published
January 13, 2006
Publisher
Urbana : University of Illinois Press, c2006.
Pages
232
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780252072666