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Record type:
kapitola v odborné knize (C)
Home Department:
Katedra anglistiky a amerikanistiky (25400)
Title:
Zitkala-Ša’s Old Indian Legends: A New Perspective
Citace
Lewandowski, C. Zitkala-Ša’s Old Indian Legends: A New Perspective.
In:
Zitkala-Ša's Old Indian Legends: A New Perspective.
Krakow: Jagiellonian University Press, 2019. s. 245-256. ISBN 978-83-233-4685-2.
Subtitle
Publication year:
2019
Obor:
Jazykověda
Form of publication:
Tištená verze
ISBN code:
978-83-233-4685-2
Book title in original language:
Zitkala-Ša's Old Indian Legends: A New Perspective
Title of the edition and volume number:
neuveden
Place of publishing:
Krakow
Publisher name:
Jagiellonian University Press
Issue reference (issue number):
:
Published:
v zahraničí
Author of the source document:
Number of pages:
11
Book page count:
311
Page from:
245
Page to:
256
Book print run:
200
EID:
Key words in English:
1901, Yankton Sioux, Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, Old Indian Legends, Zitkala-Ša, Sioux cultural resilience
Annotation in original language:
In 1901, the Yankton Sioux writer and activist Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (1876-1938) published Old Indian Legends under the Lakota name Zitkala-Ša (Red Bird). Though originally marketed as a collection of traditional Sioux stories for children, Legends functions on a much deeper level. Viewed within historical context, the book constitutes both an assertion of Sioux cultural resilience, and a condemnation of white society's damaging encroachment on indigenous lands. It is unsurprising that these themes emerge. A year before Legends appearance, the 1900 U.S. census recorded only approximately three-hundred and twenty thousand Natives remaining in the United States-the lowest number on record. Zitkala-Ša's Sioux Nation (like many other indigenous nations) had been severely affected over the previous fifty years by territorial loss, the American bison's near-extinction, an imposed farming regime based on land allotment, and traumas such as the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre, in which more than two hundred Miniconjou and Hunkpapa Lakota perished at the hands of the Seventh Calvary. In Zitkala-Ša's birthplace, Yankton Reservation, the population had meanwhile declined precipitously to under two thousand due to chicken pox, measles, influenza, and other European diseases. These upheavals form the backdrop to Old Indian Legends, in which Zitkala-Ša creates a narrative arch that, this paper argues, forecasts a cultural victory for the Sioux over white society.
Annotation in english language:
In 1901, the Yankton Sioux writer and activist Gertrude Simmons Bonnin (1876-1938) published Old Indian Legends under the Lakota name Zitkala-Ša (Red Bird). Though originally marketed as a collection of traditional Sioux stories for children, Legends functions on a much deeper level. Viewed within historical context, the book constitutes both an assertion of Sioux cultural resilience, and a condemnation of white society's damaging encroachment on indigenous lands. It is unsurprising that these themes emerge. A year before Legends appearance, the 1900 U.S. census recorded only approximately three-hundred and twenty thousand Natives remaining in the United States-the lowest number on record. Zitkala-Ša's Sioux Nation (like many other indigenous nations) had been severely affected over the previous fifty years by territorial loss, the American bison's near-extinction, an imposed farming regime based on land allotment, and traumas such as the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre, in which more than two hundred Miniconjou and Hunkpapa Lakota perished at the hands of the Seventh Calvary. In Zitkala-Ša's birthplace, Yankton Reservation, the population had meanwhile declined precipitously to under two thousand due to chicken pox, measles, influenza, and other European diseases. These upheavals form the backdrop to Old Indian Legends, in which Zitkala-Ša creates a narrative arch that, this paper argues, forecasts a cultural victory for the Sioux over white society.
References
Reference
R01:
RIV/61988987:17250/19:A20024RI
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