Skip navigation
    University of Texas Press contacts  
shopping cart
  Find a book. Journals. For authors. Booksellers & educators. About the Press.  
 
 

1999

7 x 10 in.
239 pp., 13 cartoons

Out of print

 
 
 
     

American Indian Literature and the Southwest
Contexts and Dispositions

By Eric Gary Anderson

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"I know of no other book that ranges as widely over the field of the 'Southwest,' understood as an aesthetic construct.... At its best (which is almost always), Anderson's writing is lively, witty, engaging, provocative, readable."

—Robert M. Nelson, Professor of English, University of Richmond

Culture-to-culture encounters between "natives" and "aliens" have gone on for centuries in the American Southwest—among American Indian tribes, between American Indians and Euro-Americans, and even, according to some, between humans and extraterrestrials at Roswell, New Mexico. Drawing on a wide range of cultural productions including novels, films, paintings, comic strips, and historical studies, this groundbreaking book explores the Southwest as both a real and a culturally constructed site of migration and encounter, in which the very identities of "alien" and "native" shift with each act of travel.

Eric Anderson pursues his inquiry through an unprecedented range of cultural texts. These include the Roswell spacecraft myths, Leslie Marmon Silko's Almanac of the Dead, Wendy Rose's poetry, the outlaw narratives of Billy the Kid, Apache autobiographies by Geronimo and Jason Betzinez, paintings by Georgia O'Keeffe, New West history by Patricia Nelson Limerick, Frank Norris' McTeague, Mary Austin's The Land of Little Rain, Sarah Winnemucca's Life Among the Piutes, Willa Cather's The Professor's House, George Herriman's modernist comic strip Krazy Kat, and A. A. Carr's Navajo-vampire novel Eye Killers.

Eric Gary Anderson is Assistant Professor of English at Oklahoma State University, where he teaches American and Native American literatures.


 Of Related Interest Nericcio, Tex[t]-Mex
Wild, The Opal Desert

Search Books  |  Orders |  Catalogs |  Current Season

Terms of Sale |  Privacy Policy | UT Austin Web Accessibility Guidelines
Copyright © 2003-9 University of Texas Press. All rights reserved.