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"Laguna Pueblo author Leslie Marmon Silko was raised in a culture with a strong oral tradition. She also grew up in a household where books were cherished and reading at the dinner table was not deemed rude, but instead was encouraged. In his examination of Silko's award-winning literature, Brewster E. Fitz explores the complex dynamic between the spoken story and the written word, revealing how it carries over from Silko's upbringing and plays out in her writings." "Focusing on critical essays by and interviews with Silko, Fitz argues that Silko's storytelling is informed not so much by oral Laguna culture as by the Marmon family tradition in which writing was internalized long before her birth. In Silko's writings, this conflicted desire between the oral and the written evolves into a yearning for a paradoxical written orality that would conceivably function as a perfect, nonmediated language." "The critical focus on orality in Native literature has kept the equally important tradition of Native writing from being honored. By offering close readings of stories from Storyteller and Ceremony, as well as passages from Almanac of the Dead and Gardens in the Dunes, Fitz shows how Silko weaves the oral and the written, the spirit and the flesh, into a new vision of Pueblo culture. As Fitz asserts, Silko's written word, rather than obscuring or destroying her culture's oral tradition, serves instead to sharpen it."--BOOK JACKET.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Criticism and interpretation, History, History and criticism, In literature, Indians in literature, Intellectual life, Oral tradition, Pueblo Indians, Western stories, Women and literature, Literature, West (u.s.), in literature, Western stories, history and criticismPeople
Leslie Silko (1948-)Places
United States, West (U.S.)Times
20th centuryShowing 3 featured editions. View all 3 editions?
Edition | Availability |
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1
Silko: Writing Storyteller And Medicine Woman (American Indian Literature & Critical Studies)
July 30, 2005, University of Oklahoma Press
Paperback
in English
0806137258 9780806137254
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2
Silko: Writing Storyteller and Medicine Woman (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series, V. 47)
April 2004, University of Oklahoma Press
Hardcover
in English
0806135840 9780806135847
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WorldCat
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3
Silko: writing storyteller and medicine woman
2004, University of Oklahoma Press
in English
0806135840 9780806135847
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Libraries near you:
WorldCat
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Book Details
First Sentence
"Storyteller has been read and celebrated as a work intended by Leslie Marmon Silko to foreground and continue the live voice of Pueblo oral tradition."
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- Created April 29, 2008
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November 15, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
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