In Reconstructing the Native South, Melanie Benson Taylor examines the diverse body of Native American literature in the contemporary U.S. South—literature written by the descendants of tribes who evaded Removal and have maintained ties with their southeastern homelands. In so doing Taylor advances a provocative, even counterintuitive claim: that the U.S. South and its Native American survivors have far more in common than mere geographical proximity. Both cultures have long been haunted by separate histories of loss and nostalgia, Taylor contends, and the moments when those experiences converge in explicit and startling ways have yet to be investigated by scholars. These convergences often bear the scars of protracted colonial antagonism, appropriation, and segregation, and they share preoccupations with land, sovereignty, tradition, dispossession, subjugation, purity, and violence. Taylor poses difficult questions in this work. In the aftermath of Removal and colonial devastation, what remains—for Native and non-Native southerners—to be recovered? Is it acceptable to identify an Indian “lost cause”? Is a deep sense of hybridity and intercultural affiliation the only coherent way forward, both for the New South and for its oldest inhabitants? And in these newly entangled, postcolonial environments, has global capitalism emerged as the new enemy for the twenty-first century? Reconstructing the Native South is a compellingly original work that contributes to conversations in Native American, southern, and transnational American studies.
This argument has been made repeatedly by noted scholar of Native and southern literature Eric Gary Anderson: “When Native stories about Native southern places are mostly absent, or at least inaccessible to me, is there any way that I ...
Alan Kilpatrick, The Night Has a Naked Soul: Witchcraft and Sorcery among the Western Cherokee (Syracuse NY: Syracuse University Press, 1997), 126; Robert K. Thomas, “Cherokee Values and World View,” research paper, 1958, Papers Based ...
Native American literature has always been uniquely embattled. It is marked by divergent opinions about what constitutes authenticity, sovereignty, and even literature.
... Library Bulletin 3 (February 1933): 115–16; Andrew Jackson to Rachel Jackson, November 4, 1813, Papers of Andrew Jackson, 2:444; Andrew Jackson to Rachel Jackson, May 8, 1814, The Papers of Andrew Jackson: Volume 3, 1814–1815, ed.
Gayl Jones, John Lowe, and Valerie Boyd all read the story's ending ultimately as happy, hopeful, even (as Boyd avers) “delightful.” Joe is the only gold Missie May needs, it would seem, and vice versa. It would be lovely to end with ...
American Indians and the Rhetoric of Removal and Allotment. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2015. Bowes, John P. Land Too Good for Indians: Northern Indian Removal. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2016.
Archaeologists of South Carolina and Florida and historians of the Native South, Spanish Florida, and British Carolina address elusive questions about Yamasee identity, political and social networks, and the fate of the Yamasees after the ...
Harry A. Kersey Jr., The Florida Seminoles and the New Deal, 1933—1942 (Boca Raton: Florida Atlantic University Press, 1989); Donald L. Parman, The Navajos and the New Deal (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1976); Philp, ...
... Massachusetts (n.p.: Boston History Company, 1899); Alice Morse Earle, Stage-coach and Tavern Days (New York: MacMillan Company, 1900); Thomas Weston, History of the Town of Middleboro Massachusetts (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, ...
... South, ed. Suzanne Disheroon-Green and Lisa Abney. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2002. 149–57. Mallios, Peter Lancelot ... Reconstructing the Native South: American Indian Literature and the Lost Cause. Athens: University of Georgia Press ...