Trauma and Resilience in American Indian and African American Southern History 1st Edition by Anthony S. Parent Jr, Ulrike Wiethaus – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1453902677, 9781453902677
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1453902677
ISBN 13: 9781453902677
Author: Anthony S. Parent Jr, Ulrike Wiethaus
Trauma and Resilience in American Indian and African American Southern History explores the dual process of a refusal to remember, that is, the force of active forgetting, and the multiple ways in which Native Americans and African Americans have kept alive memories of conquest and enslavement. Complex narratives of loss endured during the antebellum period still resonate in the current debate over sovereignty and reparations. Remembrances of events tinged with historical trauma are critical not only to the collective memories of American Indian and African American communities but, as public health research forcefully demonstrates, to their health and well-being on every level. Interdisciplinary dialogue and inquiry are essential to fully articulate how historical and contemporary circumstances have affected the collective memories of groups. Until recently, Southern whites have (nostalgically or dismissively) remembered American Indian and African American historical presence in the region. Their recollections silence the outrages committed and thus prevent the healing of inflicted trauma. Efforts of remembrance are at odds with intergenerational gaps of knowledge about family history and harmful stereotyping.
Trauma and Resilience in American Indian and African American Southern History 1st table of contents:
Part I: Home and Place
More Than a Slave (Poem) WALTER MEGAEL HARRIS 25
Chapter 1: American Indian Lands and the Trauma of Greed CLARA S. KIDWELL 27
Chapter 2: “Home” and “House” in Harriet Jacobs’s Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl AN
Chapter 3: The Making of an African American Family BETH NORBREY HOPKINS 59
Part II: Art and Language
Native Pride (Poem) RED HORSE 89
Chapter 4: Language Loss and Resilience in Cherokee Medicinal Texts MARGARET BENDER 91
Chapter 5: The Suppression of Native American Presence in the Protestant Myth of America MARGARET ZU
Chapter 6: Slave Songs as a Public Poetics of Resistance ANTHONY S. PARENT JR. 121
Chapter 7: Dancing as Protest: Three African American Choreographers, 1940–1960 NINA MARIA LUCAS 1
Part III: Sexuality and Family
What If (Poem) DANIEL A. SEAN LITTLE BULL 163
Chapter 8: The Slavery Experience of American Indian Women ROSEMARY WHITE SHIELD WITH SUZANNE KOEPPL
Chapter 9: IndiVisible: The Making of an Exhibition at the Museum of the American Indian GABRIELLE T
Chapter 10: African-American Mothers of Adolescents: Resilience and Strengths CHRISTY M. BUCHANAN, J
Chapter 11: The Visceral Roots of Racism STEPHEN B. BOYD 222
Part IV: Politics and Economics
Illusion of Life (Poem) WALTER MEGAEL HARRIS 239
Chapter 12: Race, Class, and the Traumatic Legacy of Southern Masculinity RONALD NEAL 241
Chapter 13: ‘Living High on the Hog’? Race, Class and Union Organizing in Rural North Carolina A
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Tags: Trauma, Resilience, American Indian, African American, Anthony Parent, Ulrike Wiethaus


