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The Age of Spirituality and Faith: Background Information on the American Indian Junior American Literature.

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Presentation on theme: "The Age of Spirituality and Faith: Background Information on the American Indian Junior American Literature."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Age of Spirituality and Faith: Background Information on the American Indian Junior American Literature

2 Did you know…  According to archaeologists, the first American Indians arrived in the our country around 50,000 B.C. by the Bering Strait.  American Indians probably founded the town you were born in, but were likely to have been removed from it forcibly.  American Indian children were taken away to boarding schools where they were punished for speaking their own languages or practicing their own religion.  American Indians were denied religious freedom until 1978.

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4 American Indian Literature is comprised of a variety of interlocking categories…  Traditional: Either for ceremonial or popular purposes, these stories include creation myths, trickster stories, stories of transformation, and tales of a cultural hero or legend.  Genres: Poetry, short fiction, novel, drama, and autobiography (particularly with contemporary works).  Traditional and genre literature can overlap and use elements of the other category.  Political protest and social criticism also make their way into many aspects of American Indian literature, from poetry to autobiographies, to speeches, and more.

5 Traditional Creation Stories:  These stories explain how aspects of the world came to be.  They are told from memory and the ones we know were often written down by anthropologists studying the tribe.  Many involve a creator deity and a reshaping of a chaotic world, a world typically covered in water.

6 Creation Stories continued: Other similarities include the forming of male and female, the creation of animals, the creation of the environment, and the emergence of good and evil. A value is placed on a balance in life between nature, man, spirits, and divinities. These stories show a profound respect for nature. The spirit is not removed from nature but in it. Animals are also seen as sacred beings, not inferior to humans, but often superior.

7 Archetypes Many myths contain archetypes, or old imaginative patterns that have appeared in literature throughout the ages. We will notice a life-giving tree in one of the stories we read; this is an archetype of American Indian literature as is the trickster hero and more.

8 American Indian Poetry  Like all poetry, American Indian Poetry is filled with imagery and inspiration.  American Indian Poetry is rooted in a continuing oral and ceremonial tradition. It reflects the tribe’s desire to live in harmony with nature and each other.  Poems may address everyday activities.  American Indian poems may also show modern Indians interacting in society or address environmental concerns.

9 Closing Thoughts  Many colleges and universities currently have whole courses devoted to American Indian Literature. There are literally hundreds of American Indian poets, authors, playwrights, activists, and essayists.  Hopefully, your knowledge of the American Indian and the dispelling of the stereotypes surrounding this culture can be achieved, in part, through studying the literature of Native Americans.


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