The Chippewa Landscape of Louise Erdrich
Louise Erdrich is arguably the most prolific and prominent contemporary writer of American Indian descent in North America today. Her novels and short stories have won great critical acclaim and are widely taught in American and world literature courses.
This collection of original ssays focuses on Erdrich's writings rooted in the Chippewa experience. Premier scholars of Native American literature investigate narrative structure, signs of ethnicity, the notions of luck and chance in Erdrich's narrative cosmology, her use of hunting metaphors, her efforts to counter stereotypes of American Indian women, her use of comedy in exploring American Indians' tragic past, her intentions underlying the process of revision in Love Medicine, and other subjects.
Including a variety of theoretical approaches, this book provides a comprehensive examination of Erdrich's work, making it more accessible to new readers and richer to those already familiar with her work.
'A timely, broadly ranging set of essays on a major American writer, still critically untapped--sophisticated and readable, informative and grounded.' —Kenneth Lincoln, UCLA
Allan Chavkin is Professor of English at Southwest Texas State University. A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff is Professor Emerita of English, University of Illinois at Chicago.