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Examples
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What exactly does David Treuer's new critique of Native American fiction -- especially the popular and highly regarded works of writers such as Louise Erdrich, Leslie Marmon Silko, James Welch, and Sherman Alexie -- have to do with linguistic preservation?
Archive 2006-08-01 2006
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What exactly does David Treuer's new critique of Native American fiction -- especially the popular and highly regarded works of writers such as Louise Erdrich, Leslie Marmon Silko, James Welch, and Sherman Alexie -- have to do with linguistic preservation?
Alas, Babel 2006
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Now an international, multi-ethnic, and cross-disciplinary group of scholars investigates the meaningful ways in which fantasy and Native America intersect, examining classics by American Indian authors such as Louise Erdrich, Gerald Vizenor, and Leslie Marmon Silko, as well as non-Native fantasists such as H.P. Lovecraft, J.R.R. Tolkien, and J.K. R.wling.
SF Signal 2009
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Ellen Ruppel Shell, "Resurgence of a Deadly Disease"; Louise Erdrich, "Satan: Hijacker of a Planet"; Roy Blount Jr.,
unknown title 2009
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I have a friend in America who teaches English at a university there and has done a lot of research on Louise Erdrich who writes about Native Americans.
The Books Have Arrived!! Lauri 2010
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So if you read my novel draft and wonder why there are miraculously blossoming olive branches, and dead people talking, and voices in the subway tunnels of New York, well, see Massud on Louise Erdrich.
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What I do think is that you have no sense that you might have overlooked something, that you might not have fully "gotten" Toni Morrison or Louise Erdrich or Maxine Hong Kingston or Ishmael Reed.
Good, better, best 2009
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Louise Erdrich is at the top of her game with this terrific tale.
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Rowlandson's story serves as inspiration for the 2003 poem "Captivity" from the Chippewa-American poet Louise Erdrich.
Travis Nichols: This Thanksgiving, Let's Not Keep Fighting the Trojan War 2009
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So if you read my novel draft and wonder why there are miraculously blossoming olive branches, and dead people talking, and voices in the subway tunnels of New York, well, see Massud on Louise Erdrich.
Culture 2009
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