000162847 001__ 162847
000162847 005__ 20250922161952.0
000162847 020__ $$a9781003507628
000162847 0247_ $$2doi$$a10.4324/9781003507628-16
000162847 037__ $$aBOOK-2025-443
000162847 041__ $$aeng
000162847 100__ $$aMartínez-Falquina, Silvia$$b
000162847 245__ $$aResurgence and Relation in Native American Literature. Susan Power's Sacred Wilderness
000162847 250__ $$a1st ed.
000162847 260__ $$aNew York$$bRoutledge$$c2025
000162847 300__ $$a18
000162847 506__ $$aall-rights-reserved
000162847 520__ $$aDespite the central role of Native American peoples in the narratives of the American West, Indigenous perspectives still deserve more attention. This essay makes a contribution in this respect by analyzing Susan Power (Standing Rock Sioux)’s Sacred Wilderness (2014) as an example of how contemporary Native literature not only challenges the stubborn opposition between civilization and savagism but also encourages us to revise the way we relate to the world and to others. Building upon the concept of resurgence, it delves into Native theories of relationality, emphasizing the ethical notion of being-with and the corresponding shift from egology to ecology. The text is replete with instances of transcending the boundaries between self and other, suggesting that what has been suppressed or silenced remains latent and will eventually resurface with more force. Power thus calls on readers to recognize the urgency and legitimacy of Native resistance and resurgence and encourages collaboration in the construction of a better future grounded in Indigenous principles of care, responsibility, and justice.
000162847 540__ $$9info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
000162847 773__ $$tTransnational and Interdisciplinary Approaches to Western American Culture. The Nomadic West
000162847 8560_ $$flplumed@unizar.es
000162847 8564_ $$s252912$$uhttps://zaguan.unizar.es/record/162847/files/BOOK-2025-443.pdf$$ySin acceso$$zSin acceso
000162847 909CO $$ooai:zaguan.unizar.es:162847$$pbooks
000162847 980__ $$aBOOK$$bCAPITULOS$$b