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Stoking the Fire: Nationhood in Early Twentieth Century Cherokee Writing

Posted on:2013-09-10Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of Texas at AustinCandidate:Brown, Kirby Lynn, IIFull Text:PDF
GTID:1455390008486397Subject:Native American Studies
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
My research builds upon interdisciplinary trends in Native scholarship emphasizing tribal-specificity; attention to understudied periods, writers, and texts; and a political commitment to engage contemporary challenges facing Indigenous communities. My dissertation examines the persistence of nationhood in Cherokee writing between the dissolution of the Cherokee government preceding Oklahoma statehood in 1907 and political reorganization in the early 1970s. Situating writing by John Milton Oskison, Rachel Caroline Eaton, Rollie Lynn Riggs and Ruth Muskrat Bronson explicitly within the Cherokee national contexts of its emergence, I attend to the complicated ways they each remembered, imagined, narrated and enacted Cherokee nationhood in the absence of a functioning state. Often read as a transitional "dark age" in Cherokee history, this period stands instead as a rich archive of Cherokee national memory capable of informing contemporary debates in the Cherokee Nation and Native Studies today.
Keywords/Search Tags:Cherokee, Nationhood
PDF Full Text Request
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