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Year 2008, Issue: 28, 5 - 14, 01.10.2008

Abstract

References

  • Brehm, Victoria. “The Metamorphoses of an Ojibwa Manido.” American Literature 68 (1996): 677-706.
  • Erdrich, Louise. Tracks. New York: Perennial Library, 1989.
  • Ferrari, Rita. “‘Where the Maps Stopped’: The Aesthetics of Borders in Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine and Tracks.” Style (1999). 19 March 2008 .
  • Larson, Sidner. “The Fragmentation of a Tribal People in Louise Erdrich’s Tracks.” American Indian Culture and Research Journal 17 (1993): 1-13.
  • Peterson, Nancy J. “History, Postmodernism and Louise Erdrich’s Tracks.” PMLA 109 (1994): 982-994.
  • Sanders, Karla. “A Healthy Balance: Religion, Identity, and Community in Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine.” MELUS (Summer 1998). 19 March 2008 .
  • Sarris, Greg. Keeping Slug Woman Alive: A Holistic Approach to American Indian Texts. Berkeley: U of California P. 1993.
  • Tanrısal, Meldan. “Mother and Child Relationships in the Novels of Louise Erdrich.” American Studies International 35 (1997): 67-79.
  • Vidmar, Shawn. “The Bear and The Owl: Finding the Imagery in Louise Erdrich’s novel Tracks.” (1997). 19 March 2008 .
  • Vigderman, Patricia. “Louise Erdrich.” Daniel Marowski. Contemporary Literary Criticism. 54. Ed. Roger Matuz. Detroit: Gale Research Inc, 1989. 164-173.
  • Whitson, Kathy J. Native American Literatures: An Encyclopedia of Works, Characters, Authors and Themes. Oxford: ABC-CLIO, 1999.

Becoming the Other: Louise Erdrich’s Tracks and the Issue of Identity for the Native Character Pauline Puyat

Year 2008, Issue: 28, 5 - 14, 01.10.2008

Abstract

In postcolonial literature racial and ethnic identities are not fixed but are subject to shaping and reshaping. Having been ascribed to and associated with cultural representations, nativity, rewriting of history, and reconstruction of identity, postcolonialism offers a space to discuss the issues of identity in the writings from the margins of the contemporary world. Postcolonial literary productions, more often than not, point to marginalized writers’ attempt to preserve their cultures and to ensure continuity. Writing for cultural survival, postcolonial authors focus on the celebration of their liminal status, and, in the process, deconstruct and reconstruct cultural codes and modes of representation. In such a scenario, history, politics, and even culture itself are altered, rediscovered, and reassessed in the voices of those who previously had no voice. Rejecting the unitary, monolithic, and monochromic versions of western textual and cultural discourse, postcolonial authors stress the polyphonic and heteroglossic concepts of a poststructuralist discourse.

References

  • Brehm, Victoria. “The Metamorphoses of an Ojibwa Manido.” American Literature 68 (1996): 677-706.
  • Erdrich, Louise. Tracks. New York: Perennial Library, 1989.
  • Ferrari, Rita. “‘Where the Maps Stopped’: The Aesthetics of Borders in Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine and Tracks.” Style (1999). 19 March 2008 .
  • Larson, Sidner. “The Fragmentation of a Tribal People in Louise Erdrich’s Tracks.” American Indian Culture and Research Journal 17 (1993): 1-13.
  • Peterson, Nancy J. “History, Postmodernism and Louise Erdrich’s Tracks.” PMLA 109 (1994): 982-994.
  • Sanders, Karla. “A Healthy Balance: Religion, Identity, and Community in Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine.” MELUS (Summer 1998). 19 March 2008 .
  • Sarris, Greg. Keeping Slug Woman Alive: A Holistic Approach to American Indian Texts. Berkeley: U of California P. 1993.
  • Tanrısal, Meldan. “Mother and Child Relationships in the Novels of Louise Erdrich.” American Studies International 35 (1997): 67-79.
  • Vidmar, Shawn. “The Bear and The Owl: Finding the Imagery in Louise Erdrich’s novel Tracks.” (1997). 19 March 2008 .
  • Vigderman, Patricia. “Louise Erdrich.” Daniel Marowski. Contemporary Literary Criticism. 54. Ed. Roger Matuz. Detroit: Gale Research Inc, 1989. 164-173.
  • Whitson, Kathy J. Native American Literatures: An Encyclopedia of Works, Characters, Authors and Themes. Oxford: ABC-CLIO, 1999.
There are 11 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Journal Section Research Article
Authors

Punyashree Panda This is me

Publication Date October 1, 2008
Published in Issue Year 2008 Issue: 28

Cite

MLA Panda, Punyashree. “Becoming the Other: Louise Erdrich’s Tracks and the Issue of Identity for the Native Character Pauline Puyat”. Journal of American Studies of Turkey, no. 28, 2008, pp. 5-14.

JAST - Journal of American Studies of Turkey