Sovereign Stories and Blood Memories
216 pages, 6 x 9
Hardcover
Release Date:15 Dec 2017
ISBN:9780826359155
GO TO CART

Sovereign Stories and Blood Memories

Native American Women's Autobiography

University of New Mexico Press

In Sovereign Stories, Annette Angela Portillo examines Native American women's autobiographical discourses and multiple-voiced life stories that resist generic conventional notions of first-person narrative. She argues that these "sovereign stories" and "blood memories" not only reveal the multilayered histories and identities shared by each author, but demonstrate how their narratives are grounded in ancestral memory and land. These autobiographies recall settler-colonialism, deterritorialization, and genocide as the writers and activist-scholars reclaim their voices across cultural, national, and digital boundaries. Portillo provides close readings of memoirs, life stories, oral histories, blogs, social media sites, and experimental multigenre narratives including those by Delfina Cuero, Ruby Modesto, Leslie Marmon Silko, Pretty-Shield, Zitkala-Sa, and Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins.

This interdisciplinary study expands the canon of Western literary and cultural production by including lesser-known works of Native women's autobiography and making a case for reading Indigenous women's cyberactivism as a digital-age extension of Native autobiographical traditions.'--Alicia Cox, Western American Literature
These collective memoirs of American Indian women are powerful reminders of the struggle of those who are often overlooked by historians dealing with Indian issues.'--Roundup
This book is an effort to recover indigenous epistemologies, an intimate embrace of spoken and visual images, silhouettes imprinted in the minds of Native American women over the centuries that are inspiring a new cadre of scholars.'--Inés M. Talamantez, coeditor of Teaching Religion and Healing

Annette Angela Portillo is an associate professor of English at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Her articles have appeared in several publications, including Western American Literature, College English Association Forum, and the Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History.

Acknowledgments

Chapter One. Indigenous Epistemologies: Decolonizing Native American Women's Sovereign Stories and the Embodiment of Shared Knowledges
Chapter Two. Delfina Cuero and Anticolonial Native American Historiography: Remapping Kumeyaay Presence through Storytelling and Place Naming
Chapter Three. "The Land and the People Are Inseparable": Writing the Oral and Visual in Leslie Marmon Silko's Memoirs Sacred Water and Turquoise Ledge
Chapter Four. The Power of Story and Resistance: Pretty-Shield, Zitkala-Sa, and Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins's As-Told-To and Self-Written Autobiographies
Chapter Five. Indigenizing the Internet through Cyberactivism, Social Media, and Communo-Blographies: The Zapatistas, Idle No More, and Activist-Bloggers
Chapter Six. Not for Innocent Ears: Decolonial Pedagogies and Indigenous-Centered Storytelling Practices in the Classroom

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Find what you’re looking for...

Free shipping on online orders over $40

Stay Informed

Receive the latest UBC Press news, including events, catalogues, and announcements.


Read past newsletters

Publishers Represented
UBC Press is the Canadian agent for several international publishers. Visit our Publishers Represented page to learn more.