"From people who value stories and songs from literary traditions that are as encompassing and intricate as those of Europe, Reinventing the Enemy's Language is the most comprehensive anthology of its kind to collect the poetry, fiction, prayer and memoir from Native American women. It is about the process of writing and speaking that sheds light on what it means to be an Indian woman at the end of the century, as many nations - including the United States and Canada - are involved in the emotionally charged question of identity and place. Over eighty writers are represented from nearly fifty nations."--BOOK JACKET.
Record details
ISBN:0393318281 (pbk.)
ISBN:0393040291
Physical Description:576 p. ; 26 cm. print
Edition:1st ed.
Publisher:New York : W.W. Norton & Company, c1997.
Content descriptions
General Note:
Includes index.
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes index.
Formatted Contents Note:
Dry Rivers - Arizona / Ramona Wilson -- By Our Hand, through the Memory, the House Is More than Form / Elizabeth Woody -- Waning August Moon / Roberta Hill -- After the Invasion / Gail Tremblay -- Sisters / Haunani-Kay Trask -- Aggi?s Last Dance / Josephine Huntington -- Moonlight / Kim Caldwell -- Buffalo Wallow Woman / Anne Lee Walters -- She Ties Her Bandanna / Beth Cuthand -- The Song Called "White Antelope?s Chant" / Suzan Shown Harjo -- Perhaps the World Ends Here / Joy Harjo.