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Full Description
Colonization has imposed drastic changes on indigenous societies in North America. This process has reverberated through cultural conceptions and constructions of social roles, particularly affecting the roles of elders and the old. This book charts these changes by analyzing representations of old age in American Indian literature. In comparing traditional stories with contemporary works, the analytical focus lies on establishing what developments can be observed in the conceptualizing of old age as visible in representations of social, political and cultural roles, such as that of the sage. Authors discussed include Sherman Alexie, Chrystos, Louise Erdrich, Janet Campbell Hale, N. Scott Momaday, Simon Ortiz, Leslie Marmon Silko, Lucy Tapahonso, Velma Wallis, and James Welch.
Contents
Contents: Cultural Imagining of Old Age - Indian Identity and Tribal Elders - Traditional Oral Narratives - Traditional Stories in Transformation - Trickster Permutations: Saged Heroes and Resilient Elders - Aging Relations: Place and Belonging - Old Age as Loss: Cultural vs. Individual Memory - Haunted by Tradition.