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Seeing red : anger, sentimentality, and American Indians  Cover Image Book Book

Seeing red : anger, sentimentality, and American Indians

Summary: In Seeing Red, Cari M. Carpenter examines anger in the poetry and prose of three early American Indian writers: S. Alice Callahan, Pauline Johnson, and Sarah Winnemucca. In articulating a legitimate anger in the late nineteenth century, the first published indigenous women writers were met not only with stereotypes of "savage" rage but with social proscriptions against female anger. While the loss of land, life, and cultural traditions is central to the Native American literature of the period, this dispossession is only one side of the story. Its counterpart, indigenous claims to that which is threatened, is just as essential to these narratives. The first published American Indian women writers used a variety of tactics to protest such dispossession. Seeing Red argues that one of the most pervasive and intriguing of these is sentimentality. Carpenter argues that while anger is a neglected element of a broad range of sentimental texts, it should be recognized as a particularly salient subject in early literature written by Native American women. To date, most literary scholars--whether they understand sentimentality in terms of sympathetic relations or of manipulative influence--have viewed anger as an obstacle to the genre. Placing anger and sentimentality in opposition, however, neglects their complex and often intimate relationship. This case study of three Native American women writers is not meant to fall easily into either the "pro" or "anti" sentimentality camp, but to acknowledge sentimentality as a fraught, yet potentially useful, mode for articulating indigenous women's anger.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780814256190 (pbk.)
  • Physical Description: print
    xiv, 177 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
  • Publisher: Columbus : Ohio State University Press, 2008.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note: Introduction : anger, sentimentality, and American Indians -- Playing angry : S. Alice Callahan's Wynema -- "A woman to let alone" : E. Pauline Johnson and the performance of anger -- Lost (and gained) in translation : language, anger, and agency in Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins's Life among the Piutes -- Conclusion : an anger of their own.
Subject: Callahan, S. Alice -- 1868- -- Criticism and interpretation
Johnson, E. Pauline -- 1861-1913 -- Criticism and interpretation
Winnemucca, Sarah -- 1844?-1891
American literature -- Indigenous authors -- History and criticism
American literature -- Women authors -- History and criticism
Indigenous peoples in literature
Anger in literature
Sentimentalism in literature
Indigenous authors -- United States -- Intellectual life -- 19th century
Indigenous authors -- Canada -- Intellectual life -- 19th century

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