Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature

The literary production of contemporary Anishinaabe writers Louise Erdrich, David Treuer and Gerald Vizenor outline imaginary geographies based in Northern Dakota and Minnesota that also branch out towards transnational spaces. By reading contemporary Anishinaabe fiction as literary cartography, thi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jobin, Danne
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/
https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/1/189Jobin-Thesis.pdf
id ftkentuniv:oai:kar.kent.ac.uk:80628
record_format openpolar
spelling ftkentuniv:oai:kar.kent.ac.uk:80628 2023-05-15T13:28:57+02:00 Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature Jobin, Danne 2019-10 application/pdf https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/ https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/1/189Jobin-Thesis.pdf en eng https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/1/189Jobin-Thesis.pdf Jobin, Danne (2019) Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis, University of Kent,. (KAR id:80628 </80628>) Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftkentuniv 2023-03-12T19:17:21Z The literary production of contemporary Anishinaabe writers Louise Erdrich, David Treuer and Gerald Vizenor outline imaginary geographies based in Northern Dakota and Minnesota that also branch out towards transnational spaces. By reading contemporary Anishinaabe fiction as literary cartography, this thesis reveals the complex maps of interaction that connect reservation spaces with a much wider range of environments by both integrating and expanding upon Indigenous histories of mobility to include border-crossings and international exchanges. The networks that emerge suggest the possibility of a more expansive Native space that nevertheless asserts Anishinaabe self-determination and sovereignty. This project aims to answer Lisa Brooks's question "What kind of map emerges [.] when the texts of Anglo-American history and literature are participants in Native space rather than the center of the story?" (The Common Pot) by using literary cartography from a tribally-centred perspective and relying on Indigenous methodologies to let meaning emerge from the texts themselves. The thesis is structured geographically and temporally starting, in the introduction, with the tribe's western migration in the mid-nineteenth century to outline the mobile practices of the Anishinaabe. Chapter one focuses on the reservation to map out space dynamically by revealing the many pathways that cross its boundaries and the mobile relationship of characters with the land. In chapter two, urban spaces are reclaimed as part of an Indigenous tradition of movement; the novels use artwork or translation as metaphors for the ties between urban characters and the reservation to establish Indigenous networks that reach into the cities. Chapter three offers a hemispheric reading of the primary texts, explores transatlantic connections, and looks at global networks in order to show how transnational encounters can simultaneously acknowledge the complexity of settler histories and intercultural exchanges while maintaining an Indigenous lens through ... Thesis anishina* University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository
op_collection_id ftkentuniv
language English
description The literary production of contemporary Anishinaabe writers Louise Erdrich, David Treuer and Gerald Vizenor outline imaginary geographies based in Northern Dakota and Minnesota that also branch out towards transnational spaces. By reading contemporary Anishinaabe fiction as literary cartography, this thesis reveals the complex maps of interaction that connect reservation spaces with a much wider range of environments by both integrating and expanding upon Indigenous histories of mobility to include border-crossings and international exchanges. The networks that emerge suggest the possibility of a more expansive Native space that nevertheless asserts Anishinaabe self-determination and sovereignty. This project aims to answer Lisa Brooks's question "What kind of map emerges [.] when the texts of Anglo-American history and literature are participants in Native space rather than the center of the story?" (The Common Pot) by using literary cartography from a tribally-centred perspective and relying on Indigenous methodologies to let meaning emerge from the texts themselves. The thesis is structured geographically and temporally starting, in the introduction, with the tribe's western migration in the mid-nineteenth century to outline the mobile practices of the Anishinaabe. Chapter one focuses on the reservation to map out space dynamically by revealing the many pathways that cross its boundaries and the mobile relationship of characters with the land. In chapter two, urban spaces are reclaimed as part of an Indigenous tradition of movement; the novels use artwork or translation as metaphors for the ties between urban characters and the reservation to establish Indigenous networks that reach into the cities. Chapter three offers a hemispheric reading of the primary texts, explores transatlantic connections, and looks at global networks in order to show how transnational encounters can simultaneously acknowledge the complexity of settler histories and intercultural exchanges while maintaining an Indigenous lens through ...
format Thesis
author Jobin, Danne
spellingShingle Jobin, Danne
Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature
author_facet Jobin, Danne
author_sort Jobin, Danne
title Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature
title_short Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature
title_full Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature
title_fullStr Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature
title_full_unstemmed Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature
title_sort mapping out native american space in contemporary anishinaabe literature
publishDate 2019
url https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/
https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/1/189Jobin-Thesis.pdf
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation https://kar.kent.ac.uk/80628/1/189Jobin-Thesis.pdf
Jobin, Danne (2019) Mapping out Native American Space in Contemporary Anishinaabe Literature. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis, University of Kent,. (KAR id:80628 </80628>)
_version_ 1765997470363418624