Changing Is Not Vanishing: A Collection of American Indian Poetry to 1930 by Robert Dale Parker


Changing Is Not Vanishing: A Collection of American Indian Poetry to 1930
Title : Changing Is Not Vanishing: A Collection of American Indian Poetry to 1930
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0812242629
ISBN-10 : 9780812242621
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 456
Publication : First published December 16, 2010

Until now, the study of American Indian literature has tended to concentrate on contemporary writing. Although the field has grown rapidly, early works—especially poetry—remain mostly unknown and inaccessible. Changing Is Not Vanishing simultaneously reinvents the early history of American Indian literature and the history of American poetry by presenting a vast but forgotten archive of American Indian poems. Through extensive archival research in small-circulation newspapers and magazines, manuscripts, pamphlets, rare books, and scrapbooks, Robert Dale Parker has uncovered the work of more than 140 early Indian poets who wrote before 1930. Changing Is Not Vanishing includes poems by 82 writers and provides a full bibliography of all the poets Parker has identified—most of them unknown even to specialists in Indian literature. In a wide range of approaches and styles, the poems in this collection address such topics as colonialism and the federal government, land, politics, nature, love, war, Christianity, and racism. With a richly informative introduction and extensive annotation, Changing Is Not Vanishing opens the door to a trove of fascinating, powerful poems that will be required reading for all scholars and readers of American poetry and American Indian literature.


Changing Is Not Vanishing: A Collection of American Indian Poetry to 1930 Reviews


  • Laura

    It was not the poems themselves that as a whole I found the most enjoyable but rather the collection of histories that this book brings together. any book that adds more to my to read list is a good book in my mind. Although I had done a lot of reading about the history of indigenous people in Canada and America I was interested in some of the global struggles that some of the writers referred to and identified with which I know little about - the phillipines and Cuba in the early 1900s.