Changing Women: The Cross-Currents of American Indian Feminine Identity
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Changing Women: The Cross-Currents of American Indian Feminine Identity

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https://doi.org/10.17953Creative Commons 'BY-NC' version 4.0 license
Abstract

Introduction The Blanket Around Her Maybe it is her birth which she holds close to herself or her death which is just as inseparable and the white wind that encircles her is a part just as the blue sky hanging in turquoise from her neck oh woman remember who you are woman it is the whole earth -Jot Harjo Laguna novelist Leslie Silko begins Ceremony with one word-"Sunrise." The word is simple, yet it encompasses an entire body of culture and thought which revolves around the concepts of birth, regeneration, cyclicity and the union of masculine and feminine elements. Many American Indian world views speak of balanced "opposite" forces which combine as a dynamic whole to form the universe. One may extend the metaphor of ”sunrise” further in reference to the contemporary “rebirth” of American Indian cultures, perhaps best illustrated in the growing body of literature by American Indian writers. Kenneth Lincoln makes such an analogy in his comprehensive analysis of American Indian literature, Native American Renaissance. Interestingly, Lincoln correlates the dynamics of this movement to gender as he writes, ”Native Americans are writing prolifically, particularly the women, who correlate feminist, nativist, and artistic commitments in a compelling rebirth.”

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