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Conversations with LeAnne Howe is the first collection of
interviews with the groundbreaking Choctaw author, whose
genre-bending works take place in the US Southeast, Oklahoma, and
beyond our national borders to bring Native American characters and
themes to the global stage. Best known for her American Book
Award-winning novel Shell Shaker (2001), LeAnne Howe (b. 1951) is
also a poet, playwright, screenwriter, essayist, theorist, and
humorist. She has held numerous honors including a Fulbright
Distinguished Scholarship in Amman, Jordan, from 2010 to 2011, and
she was the recipient of the Modern Language Association's first
Prize for Studies in Native American Literatures, Cultures, and
Languages for her travelogue, Choctalking on Other Realities
(2013). Spanning the period from 2002 to 2020, the interviews in
this collection delve deeply into Howe's poetics, her innovative
critical methodology of tribalography, her personal history, and
her position on subjects ranging from the Lone Ranger to Native
American mascots. Two previously unpublished interviews, "'An
American in New York': LeAnne Howe" (2019) and "Genre-Sliding on
Stage with LeAnne Howe" (2020), explore unexamined areas of her
personal history and how it impacted her creative work, including
childhood trauma and her incubation as a playwright in the 1980s.
These conversations along with 2019's Occult Poetry Radio interview
also give important insights on the background of Howe's newest
critically acclaimed work, Savage Conversations (2019), about Mary
Todd Lincoln's hallucination of a "Savage Indian" during her time
in Bellevue Place sanitarium. Taken as a whole, Conversations with
LeAnne Howe showcases the development and continued impact of one
of the most important Indigenous American writers of the
twenty-first century.
Conversations with LeAnne Howe is the first collection of
interviews with the groundbreaking Choctaw author, whose
genre-bending works take place in the US Southeast, Oklahoma, and
beyond our national borders to bring Native American characters and
themes to the global stage. Best known for her American Book
Award-winning novel Shell Shaker (2001), LeAnne Howe (b. 1951) is
also a poet, playwright, screenwriter, essayist, theorist, and
humorist. She has held numerous honors including a Fulbright
Distinguished Scholarship in Amman, Jordan, from 2010 to 2011, and
she was the recipient of the Modern Language Association's first
Prize for Studies in Native American Literatures, Cultures, and
Languages for her travelogue, Choctalking on Other Realities
(2013). Spanning the period from 2002 to 2020, the interviews in
this collection delve deeply into Howe's poetics, her innovative
critical methodology of tribalography, her personal history, and
her position on subjects ranging from the Lone Ranger to Native
American mascots. Two previously unpublished interviews, "'An
American in New York': LeAnne Howe" (2019) and "Genre-Sliding on
Stage with LeAnne Howe" (2020), explore unexamined areas of her
personal history and how it impacted her creative work, including
childhood trauma and her incubation as a playwright in the 1980s.
These conversations along with 2019's Occult Poetry Radio interview
also give important insights on the background of Howe's newest
critically acclaimed work, Savage Conversations (2019), about Mary
Todd Lincoln's hallucination of a "Savage Indian" during her time
in Bellevue Place sanitarium. Taken as a whole, Conversations with
LeAnne Howe showcases the development and continued impact of one
of the most important Indigenous American writers of the
twenty-first century.
Swamp Souths: Literary and Cultural Ecologies expands the
geographical scope of scholarship about southern swamps. Although
the physical environments that form its central subjects are
scattered throughout the southeastern United States, the
Atchafalaya, the Okefenokee, the Mississippi River delta, the
Everglades, and the Great Dismal Swamp, this evocative collection
challenges fixed notions of place and foregrounds the ways in which
ecosystems shape cultures and creations on both local and global
scales. Across seventeen scholarly essays, along with a critical
introduction and afterword, Swamp Souths introduces new frameworks
for thinking about swamps in the South and beyond, with an emphasis
on subjects including Indigenous studies, ecocriticism,
intersectional feminism, and the tropical sublime. The volume
analyses canonical writers such as William Faulkner, Zora Neale
Hurston, and Eudora Welty, but it also investigates contemporary
literary works by Randall Kenan and Karen Russell, the films Beasts
of the Southern Wild and My Louisiana Love, and music ranging from
swamp rock and zydeco to Beyonce's visual album Lemonade.
Navigating a complex assemblage of places and ecosystems, the
contributors argue with passion and critical rigor for considering
anew the literary and cultural work that swamps do. This dynamic
collection of scholarship proves that swampy approaches to southern
spaces possess increased relevance in an era of climate change and
political crisis.
With the publication of her first novel, Shell Shaker (2001),
Choctaw writer LeAnne Howe quickly emerged as a crucial voice in
twenty-first-century American literature. Her innovative,
award-winning works of fiction, poetry, drama, and criticism
capture the complexities of Native American life and interrogate
histories of both cultural and linguistic oppression throughout the
United States. In the first monograph to consider Howe's entire
body of work, LeAnne Howe at the Intersections of Southern and
Native American Literature, Kirstin L. Squint expands contemporary
scholarship on Howe by examining her nuanced portrayal of Choctaw
history and culture as modes of expression. Squint shows that
Howe's writings engage with Native, southern, and global networks
by probing regional identity, gender power, authenticity, and
performance from a distinctly Choctaw perspective, a method of
discourse which Howe terms ""Choctalking."" Drawing on
interdisciplinary methodologies and theories, Squint complicates
prevailing models of the Native South by proposing the concept of
the ""Interstate South,"" a space in which Native Americans travel
physically and metaphorically between tribal national and U.S.
boundaries. Squint considers Howe's engagement with these
interconnected spaces and cultures, as well as how indigeneity can
circulate throughout them. This important critical work, which
includes an appendix with a previously unpublished interview with
Howe, contributes to ongoing conversations about the Native South,
positioning Howe as a pivotal creative force operating at
under-examined points of contact between Native American and
southern literature.
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